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In the NoCo

How Erie residents pushed back against a drilling project that would have reached 5 miles beneath the town

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A proposed drilling project in Weld County would bore five miles under the town of Erie. It has the town's residents enraged and the Colorado Energy and Carbon Management Commission recently stepped in to put a stay on the project. Extraction Oil & Gas — the company proposing the project — must now investigate a second possible site before a decision is made.
KUNC
A proposed drilling project in Weld County would bore five miles under the town of Erie. It has the town's residents enraged and the Colorado Energy and Carbon Management Commission recently stepped in to put a stay on the project. Extraction Oil & Gas — the company proposing the project — must now investigate a second possible site before a decision is made.

One of the most unusual stories in recent memory about Colorado’s oil and gas industry popped up in the town of Erie. It was actually about what happens underneath Erie.

A company wanted to access some underground oil and gas located beneath the town. But Erie has more than 30,000 residents. So putting a fracking operation in the middle of neighborhoods and schools wasn’t going to be very popular.

Instead, the company, called Extraction Oil and Gas, proposed a plan to do what’s called horizontal drilling. They would set up their equipment on the outskirts of Erie – in unincorporated Weld County – which has fewer restrictions on drilling. Then they would drill horizontally for as far as five miles to the west – to tap into the oil and gas beneath the town.

But some residents in the town pushed back, saying they don’t want to live on top of an oil and gas operation. And now state regulators have had to get involved.

°­±«±·°ä’s Rae Solomon has been following this story. Solomon spoke with In the NoCo’s Brad Turner and explained what might happen next – and what it could mean for how fracking is regulated at the local level.

For more on this issue, check out stories by the and which cover a recent hearing and decision by the Colorado Energy and Carbon Management Commission about the proposed drilling site.

KUNC's In The NoCo is a daily slice of stories, news, people and issues. It's a window to the communities along the Colorado Rocky Mountains. The show brings context and insight to the stories of the day, often elevating unheard voices in the process. And because life in Northern Colorado is a balance of work and play, we celebrate the lighter side of things here, too.
I am the Rural and Small Communities Reporter at KUNC. That means my focus is building relationships and telling stories from under-covered pockets of Colorado.
Brad Turner is an executive producer in KUNC's newsroom. He manages the podcast team that makes In The NoCo, which also airs weekdays in Morning Edition and All Things Considered. His work as a podcaster and journalist has appeared on NPR's Weekend Edition, NPR Music, the PBS °µºÚ±¬ÁÏhour, Colorado Public Radio, MTV Online, the Denver Post, Boulder's Daily Camera, and the Longmont Times-Call.
Ariel Lavery grew up in Louisville, Colorado and has returned to the Front Range after spending over 25 years moving around the country. She co-created the podcast Middle of Everywhere for WKMS, Murray State University’s NPR member station, and won Public Media Journalism awards in every season she produced for Middle of Everywhere. Her most recent series project is "The Burn Scar", published with The Modern West podcast. In it, she chronicles two years of her family’s financial and emotional struggle following the loss of her childhood home in the Marshall Fire.