Current:Home > reviewsNew Mexico governor proposes $500M to treat fracking wastewater -PrimeFinance
New Mexico governor proposes $500M to treat fracking wastewater
View
Date:2025-04-13 06:17:46
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico would underwrite development of a strategic new source of water by buying treated water that originates from the used, salty byproducts of oil and natural gas drilling, and help preserve its freshwater aquifers in the process, under a proposal from the state’s Democratic governor.
The initiative from Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, announced Tuesday from the international climate conference at Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, would set water purification standards and purchase treated water that originates from oil fields as well as the state’s vast natural underground reservoirs of brine. It requires legislative approval.
The idea is to create a government-guaranteed market for the commodity — treated water — and attract private enterprise to build desalinization and treatment facilities, securing new sources of water for industrial applications. The administration hopes to make the water available to businesses ranging from microchip manufacturers to hydrogen fuel producers that separate the element from water in an energy-intensive process.
Lujan Grisham said she’ll ask the Legislature to set aside $500 million to underwrite acquisition of treated water. The arrangement would harness the state’s bonding authority and financial reserves held in its multibillion-dollar Severance Tax Permanent Fund. The trust, founded in the 1970s, is sustained by taxes on the extraction of oil, natural gas and other minerals from state land.
“We’re going to turn water — this waste, which is a problem — into a commodity,” Lujan Grisham said at the conference. “We give a fixed, long-term, (let’s) say 30-year contract to any number of companies that can provide the technology to identify that water, to clean that water up, and to use it in chip manufacturing, solar manufacturing.”
She said the goal is avoid a reckoning on fresh-water supplies as the Rio Grande and underground fresh-water aquifers recede. The state also has extensive underground reservoirs of salty water that have been of limited use.
That brackish water is a crucial component in hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, and advanced drilling techniques that have helped turn New Mexico into the No. 2 oil production state in the U.S. The state’s oil wells draw out far more water than oil, by several multiples, according to oil field regulators.
State Environment Secretary James Kenney said the goal is to move water from the “waste to the commodity side of the ledger,” noting that minerals such as lithium might be recovered during water treatment for commercial purposes. He acknowledged that the environmental implications are complex and offered assurances of adequate oversight through a 2019 law regarding oil industry water uses.
“We’ll have that carrot and stick approach,” Kenney said “We need that carrot approach to continue to move the economic needle while preserving our freshwater resources.”
Democratic state Senate Majority Leader Peter Wirth of Santa Fe signaled enthusiasm for the ideas in a social media post.
“Creating a state reserve of treated water for renewable energy projects merits serious consideration in the upcoming session,” Wirth said.
New Mexico state government is navigating an unprecedented financial windfall from record setting oil production centered in the Permian Basin that extends across southeastern New Mexico and portions of western Texas. The state currently anticipates a $3.5 billion general fund surplus for the coming fiscal year — equal to roughly one-third of current annual spending commitments.
Still, it’s unclear how the water initiative will be received when the Democratic-led Legislature convenes in January.
Lawmakers within the Democratic Party have clashed in recent years over strategies for modernizing the electric grid, transportation and water infrastructure to address climate change, wary of disrupting an oil industry that is a major source of private employment and government spending.
Republican state Rep. Larry Scott of Hobbs, an oil industry engineer, expressed skepticism that the state can quickly scale up water treatment and dispose of massive amounts of salt.
“Anybody that comes to me with a project to make the desert bloom, my first question has to be, what are you going to do with salt?” he said. “It’s monumental. And unless you solve that problem, produced water will continue to be a waste product.”
veryGood! (37)
Related
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Can a solar eclipse blind you? Get to know 5 popular eclipse myths before April 8
- For people in Gaza, the war with Israel has made a simple phone call anything but
- NFL draft's QB conundrum: Could any 2024 passers be better than Caleb Williams?
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Cancer patient dragged by New York City bus, partially paralyzed, awarded $72.5 million in lawsuit
- Iris Apfel, fashion icon who garnered social media fame in her later years, dies at 102
- A 4-year-old Gaza boy lost his arm – and his family. Half a world away, he’s getting a second chance
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- First over-the-counter birth control pill heads to stores
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- NASCAR Las Vegas race March 2024: Start time, TV, streaming, lineup for Pennzoil 400
- Freddie Mercury's London home for sale after being preserved for 30 years: See inside
- Two fragile DC neighborhoods hang in the balance as the Wizards and Capitals consider leaving town
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- PHOTOS: What it's like to be 72 — the faces (and wisdom) behind the age
- Resist Booksellers vows to 'inspire thinkers to go out in the world and leave their mark'
- Lawyers who successfully argued Musk pay package was illegal seek $5.6 billion in Tesla stock
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
'Dune: Part Two' brings spice power to the box office with $81.5 million debut
Angel Reese and her mother had a special escort for LSU's senior day: Shaq
Getting off fossil fuels is hard, but this city is doing it — building by building
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Analysis: LeBron James scoring 40,000 points will be a moment for NBA to savor
Knicks avoid catastrophic injury as Jalen Brunson diagnosed with knee contusion
How a student's friendship with Auburn coach Bruce Pearl gave him the strength to beat leukemia