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Pa. governor blocks gas leases

Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell delivers the keynote address during the 2010 Jefferson-Jackson Dinner in St. Louis on March 19, 2010. The Jefferson-Jackson Dinner brings the state's democratic party together for a night of speeches by state-wide elected officials. UPI/Bill Greenblatt
Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell delivers the keynote address during the 2010 Jefferson-Jackson Dinner in St. Louis on March 19, 2010. The Jefferson-Jackson Dinner brings the state's democratic party together for a night of speeches by state-wide elected officials. UPI/Bill Greenblatt | License Photo

HARRISBURG, Pa., Oct. 27 (UPI) -- A moratorium on exploiting natural gas in Pennsylvania state forests will protect sensitive land from environmental damage, the state's governor announced.

Roughly 1.5 million acres of state forests in Pennsylvania lie on the Marcellus shale formation, an area rich in natural gas.

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Shale gas deposits locked in the Appalachian Basin yielded 100 million cubic feet of natural gas in 2009. Environmental groups say the process that releases gas from shale deposits causes irreparable damage to the environment, however.

"Drilling companies' rush to grab private lands across the state has left few areas untouched by this widespread industrial activity," Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell said in a statement. "We need to protect our unleased public lands from this rush because they are the most significant tracts of undisturbed forest remaining in the state."

Rendell said a federal study found that granting more gas leases in his state would endanger the environmental well being of the $6 billion forest products industry in Pennsylvania.

The governor said his executive order was necessary after state legislatures failed to take similar measures.

"We simply cannot risk subjecting these sensitive and high-value tracts to the same kind of environmental accidents and mishaps that have happened on private lands elsewhere in the state because of the drilling industry's poor practices," he added.

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