Conceding to Manchin, U.S. climate bill exempts most oil industry from
methane fees
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[August 10, 2022]
By Valerie Volcovici and Nichola Groom
(Reuters) - The U.S. Senate climate bill’s
fee on oil and gas industry methane emissions will cover less than half
the sector’s releases of the powerful greenhouse gas, thanks to
concessions made to win over party holdout Joe Manchin, according to a
review of the legislation and interviews with lawmakers that negotiated
it.
The reduced scope of the fee is among numerous changes made by Senate
Democratic leadership to secure a deal on the hard-won Inflation
Reduction Act, which is being hailed as the biggest climate package in
U.S. history but which pales in comparison to President Joe Biden’s
initial vision for legislative action on global warming.
The oil and gas industry is the top source of U.S. emissions of methane,
a gas that is as many as 80-times more damaging to the climate than
carbon dioxide and which scientists say must be controlled quickly to
avert the worst impacts of climate change.
The fee aims to force oil and gas companies to plug leaks and stop
deliberate venting of their methane during drilling, transport, storage
and processing by charging companies for excess emissions, starting at
$900 per metric tonne in 2024, rising to $1500 by 2026.
But the fee only applies to companies that emit 25,000 metric tons of
CO2 equivalent per year - including a small number of the largest oil
companies and independent producers -effectively exempting around 60% of
industry emissions, according to an analysis of the bill by the
Congressional Research Service. Most methane releases are the result of
excess emissions like leaks from storage tanks, wells, and pipelines.
Delaware Senator Tom Carper, who quietly negotiated the parameters of
the fee with Manchin after the West Virginia senator opposed the
original proposal, said the bill reflected some compromises with Manchin
– whose constituency includes coal, oil, and gas interests and whose
vote was needed to pass the legislation.
“The consensus is reflective of our concerns, and to make sure we keep
the eye on the prize, but also not ignore the concerns of negotiating,”
Carper said.
In another concession made to Manchin, oil and gas companies that comply
with the Environmental Protection Agency's forthcoming methane rules due
later this year would also be exempted from the fee. The rules require
companies to upgrade equipment, monitor leaks and clean them up.
Some environmentalists say such concessions weaken the impact of the fee
because it lets many polluting facilities off the hook.
The bill would also exempt distribution facilities that bring natural
gas to homes and businesses, offer exemptions to some pipelines and
gathering facilities that sell volumes of gas below a certain threshold
and give industry nearly $1.5 billion in financial incentives to clean
up their methane.
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Natural gas flares are seen at an oil pump site outside of
Williston, North Dakota March 11, 2013. REUTERS/Shannon
Stapleton/File Photo
Manchin did not respond to a request for comment but in a press
release announcing the bill, he touted the inclusion of financial
resources to help companies drive down their methane emissions.
REDUCED SCOPE
An earlier methane fee proposed by Democratic senators Sheldon
Whitehouse, Brian Schatz and Cory Booker in 2021 did not include
those exemptions or financial support and also would have imposed a
much higher fee on emissions, starting at $1,800 per ton in 2023.
Carper said Manchin was worried about the impact of a fee on smaller
companies, including those without the right equipment to handle
captured methane.
Erik Schlenker-Goodrich, executive director of advocacy group
Western Environmental Law Center, called the methane fee’s
exemptions for smaller emitters troubling.
“Many oil and gas facilities aren’t subject to this threshold and
thus don’t report their greenhouse gas emissions. Yet, cumulatively,
these facilities — spread across public lands and communities — do
emit vast greenhouse gas emissions,” he said.
Industry representatives, meanwhile, complained the fee would
discourage energy production at a time of high consumer prices and
double-up on EPA rules.
“Imposing this fee… creates a huge unknown for the industry and the
American people as to the full extent of cost increases this will
have on American-made energy,” said Anne Bradbury, CEO of the
American Exploration and Production Council.
Senator Sheldon Whitehouse said despite disappointment that his bill
was scaled down, he hopes the fee and new EPA rules will embolden
federal agencies to crack down on methane polluters and force
companies to start detecting their emissions earlier than they would
have with just EPA rules to meet.
"This will force compliance from an industry that has been highly
non-compliant,” he said.
(Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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