U.S. unveils crackdown on methane, starting with oil and gas rules
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[November 02, 2021]
By Valerie Volcovici and Nichola Groom
(Reuters) - The Biden administration on
Tuesday will unveil a plan to slash emissions of the greenhouse gas
methane across the country, starting with oil and gas wells, pipelines
and other infrastructure as part of its broader strategy to crack down
on climate change.
The announcement of the U.S. Methane Emissions Reduction Plan will
coincide with the United Nations climate conference in Glasgow,
Scotland, where the United States, the world's second-largest greenhouse
gas emitter, is seeking to reclaim leadership on the world stage by
demonstrating tangible steps to curb emissions at home.
President Joe Biden has set a target to slash greenhouse gas emissions
by more than 50% by 2030, but is struggling to pass major pieces of
climate legislation through a deeply divided Congress, making policies
by federal agencies more crucial.
At the center of the plan his administration will launch on Tuesday is a
EPA proposal that will for the first time regulate methane that spews
from existing oil and gas operations. Oil and gas account for a third of
methane emissions.
"The timing of this is critical. As we speak, world leaders are
gathering right now in Glasgow and they are looking to the United States
for true leadership," U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator
Michael Regan told Reuters in an interview about the plan. "This
proposal is absolutely bold, aggressive and comprehensive."
Methane is the second-biggest cause of climate change after carbon
dioxide and has become a focal point at the Glasgow summit. Its high
heat-trapping potential and relatively short lifespan in the atmosphere
means cutting its emissions can have an outsized impact on the
trajectory of the climate.
The EPA proposal will require oil and gas companies to routinely monitor
300,000 of their biggest well sites and other infrastructure for methane
leaks and repair them quickly when found, according to a summary seen by
Reuters.
Regan said the rule would not only have a swift impact on climate but
also improve air quality for low-income "environmental justice"
communities that live near oil and gas operations.
The EPA proposal would also require oil drillers that
produce natural gas as a byproduct to sell it or flare it instead of
venting it into the atmosphere, and require upgrades to equipment such
as storage tanks, compressors, and pneumatic pumps to reduce leaks.
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A pipeline that moves methane gas from the Frank R. Bowerman
landfill to an onsite power plant is shown in Irvine, California,
California, U.S., June 15, 2021.Picture taken June 15, 2021.
REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
The agency also said it will release a supplemental proposal next
year that would flesh out the regulatory text and possibly expand
the rule to include additional methane sources, including abandoned
oil and gas wells, gas flares, pipeline "pigging" operations for
cleaning or maintenance, and tank truck loading.
The rules would most likely take effect in 2023 and would slash
methane from oil and gas operations by 74% from 2005 levels by 2035,
an amount equivalent to the emissions created by all U.S. passenger
cars and planes in 2019, according to the summary.
The EPA's proposals require companies with well sites emitting an
estimated 3 tons of methane per year or more to monitor for leaks
quarterly, a threshold the agency said would capture sites
responsible for 86% of leaks.
Oil and gas industry groups had pressed EPA to exclude smaller wells
from the regulations, citing the sheer number of such wells and the
costs of the monitoring and repairs.
The administration's methane strategy includes a new proposal by
pipeline regulator PHMSA requiring companies to monitor and repair
methane leaks on about 400,000 miles of previously unregulated
gathering lines. Other U.S. agencies will launch voluntary programs
to cut emissions from industries such as agriculture and waste
management, according to a senior administration official.
The plan also proposes new voluntary measures from the Agriculture
and Interior departments to tackle methane emissions from other
major sources, including landfills, agriculture and abandoned wells
and coal mines.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici and Nichola Groom. Editing by Gerry
Doyle)
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