Investors Call on WPX Energy to Abandon Plan to Take Drinking Water Tank from Pennsylvania Family

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Environment California

Echoing demands of PennEnvironment and Environment America, Green Century Capital Management and nine other investors today delivered a letter (below) to WPX Energy calling on the company to stop its plan to remove the drinking water storage tank at the home of Tammy Manning in Franklin Forks, Pa. WPX sought and obtained a court order, which allows the company to seize the water tank from the Mannings on or after Dec. 16.

“Fracking operations are now leaving families like the Mannings deprived of their drinking water not once, but twice,” said Erika Staaf, clean water advocate for PennEnvironment. “We urge WPX to publicly and permanently abandon any plans to seize water tanks from Pennsylvania families.”

After WPX began operations at two nearby fracking wells, the Mannings discovered that their drinking water well was contaminated. As Tammy Manning explains in a new Breakthroughs segment with Environment America, her granddaughter Madison began suffering bouts of nausea, which only ceased when the family shut off its water well and began relying on water deliveries to the storage tank that WPX is now planning to seize.

 State tests revealed several contaminants in the Manning’s water well – including barium, which is linked to gastrointestinal dysfunction, and methane, which put the family at risk from fire or explosion.  State officials also found faulty well casings on WPX’s drilling wells, and urged the company to provide water to the families and vent their wells.  Yet the state now rejects claims that WPX caused contamination of the Manning’s water well.

 “This is our water we’re talking about,” said Tammy Manning.  “This is what fracking is doing to us and our communities.”

 The WPX-Manning episode is a small window into how fracking operations threaten drinking water in Pennsylvania and beyond. This fall, Environment America’s “Fracking by the Numbers” report documented numerous instances of water contamination—from well blowouts to frack-fluid spills to leaks of toxic fracking waste—along with other environmental impacts.

For all these reasons, Environment America and its state affiliates are working to stop fracking wherever we can.  Just this week, the City of Dallas and Erie County, NY became the latest communities to effectively stop fracking within their borders.

The incident also reveals the impunity with which the industry often operates.

 “Time and again, we have seen the oil and gas industry operate with callous arrogance here–placing gag orders on doctors and on residents who dare to seek justice in our courts, pressing Harrisburg to strip away communities’ say over drilling operations within their borders, and illegal dumping of fracking waste,” observed Staaf. “Seizing a tank that is a family’s only access to drinking water—that is par for the course.”

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 Environment America is a federation of 29 state-based, citizen-supported, environmental advocacy organization, working towards a cleaner, greener, healthier future. www.EnvironmentAmerica.org

PennEnvironment is our state affiliate in Pennsylvania.

www.PennEnvironment.org

 

December 11, 2013

 

Ralph A. Hill, President and Chief Executive Officer

CC. Stephen E. Brilz, Vice President and Corporate Secretary

WPX Energy, Inc.

One Williams Center

Tulsa, Oklahoma 74172

 

Dear Mr. Hill,

 

The undersigned investors believe that companies that attend to environmental and social risks may enjoy competitive advantages. We are writing to urge WPX Energy Appalachia LLC (WPX) to respect community concerns and environmental impacts associated with its hydraulic fracturing operations.

 

In particular, we urge the company to stop its effort to remove the drinking water tank of the family of Tammy Manning. The DEP requested that WPX install these tanks after finding dangerously high levels of barium, aluminum, iron, and methane in the Mannings water. These tanks provide critical drinking water to a family whose water would otherwise be unsafe to drink.

 

Hydraulic fracturing operations are increasing[ly] controversial and WPX’s recent actions to remove clean drinking water from the Manning family have increased the reputational risk for the company and its shareholders. The companies’ decision to remove the drinking water tank has resulted in negative media attention for the company and risks damaging the company’s community relations. Removing the Manning’s access to safe drinking water risks positioning WPX as a corporation that is not concerned with the well-being or basic human needs of residents living near its operations.

 

Unfortunately for shareholders, this recent high profile set of actions by WPX is not the only negative publicity that resulted from company inattentiveness to its operations and its public relations. Over the past year, Pennsylvania state regulators have called on WPX vent four wells that had dangerous levels of methane and test water sources in local towns. WPX also received a series of state violation notices for its drilling.

 

Companies are increasingly held responsible for its environmental and social risks and management. We urge WPX to immediately drop its plans to remove the drinking water tank from the Mannings and make its change public.

 

Thank you for your attention to this matter.

 

Sincerely,

 

Leslie Samuelrich

President

Green Century Capital Management

 

Barbara Jennings

Director

Midwest Coalition for Responsible Investment

 

Ruth Geraets, PBVM

Treasurer

Sisters of the Presentation of the BVM

 

Mecky Kessler-Howell

Financial Advisor

Progressive Asset Management Group

 

Nora Nash

Director Corporate Social Responsibility

Sisters of St Francis of Philadelphia

 

Judy Byron, OP

Director

Northwest Coalition for Responsible Investment

 

Valerie Heinonen

Director, Shareholder Advocacy

Ursulines of Tildonk for Justice and Peace

 

Natasha Lamb

Director of Equity Research & Shareholder Engagment

Arjuna Capital

 

Julie N.W. Goodridge

President & CEO

NorthStar Asset Management, Inc.

 

Sonia Kowal

Director of Socially Responsible Investing

Zevin Asset Management

staff | TPIN

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