Interior Department To Reverse Obama Rule Restricting Methane Emissions

KANAB, UT - MAY 10: U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke talks to reporters before departing Kanab Airport on May 10, 2017 in Kanab, Utah. Zinke has been in the state of Utah since Sunday talking with state and ... KANAB, UT - MAY 10: U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke talks to reporters before departing Kanab Airport on May 10, 2017 in Kanab, Utah. Zinke has been in the state of Utah since Sunday talking with state and local officials and touring the Bears Ears National Monument and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, to help determine their future status under the Trump Administration. (Photo by George Frey/Getty Images) MORE LESS
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Interior Department is replacing an Obama-era regulation aimed at restricting harmful methane emissions from oil and gas production on federal lands.

A rule being published in the Federal Register this week will replace the 2016 rule with requirements similar to those in force before the Obama administration changed the regulation.

Interior had previously announced it was delaying the Obama-era rule until January 2019, arguing that it was overly burdensome to industry. Officials said then that the delay would give the federal Bureau of Land Management time to review the earlier rule while avoiding tens of millions of dollars in compliance costs to industry.

Methane, the main component of natural gas, is frequently wasted through leaks or intentional releases during drilling operations. An estimated $330 million a year in methane is wasted on federal lands, enough to power about 5 million homes a year.

The new rule announced Monday marks at least the fourth time the Trump administration has moved to delay, set aside or replace the Obama-era rule, which was finalized in late 2016.

The rule forced energy companies to capture methane that’s burned off or “flared” at drilling sites because it pollutes the environment. Many companies consider the rule unnecessary and overly intrusive, but environmental groups warn that methane emissions from oil and gas operations are the second largest industrial contributor to climate change in the United States. Methane is far more potent at trapping heat than carbon dioxide but does not stay in the air as long.

Methane pollution also poses a risk to public health, especially to those who suffer from asthma or other breathing difficulties.

The new rule comes after a federal judge rejected a bid by the Trump administration to roll back the rule last fall. The Republican-controlled Senate upheld the Obama rule last May in a vote that surprised and angered many conservatives and delighted environmentalists.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Elizabeth Laporte of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California said in October that Interior had failed to give a “reasoned explanation” for changing the Obama-era rule and had not offered details on why an earlier analysis by the Obama administration was faulty.

Laporte’s order reinstated the 2016 rule, but BLM later delayed the rule until 2019.

The rule announced Monday is intended to be a permanent replacement for the Obama rule. The public has 60 days to comment, with a final rule expected later this year.

House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Rob Bishop hailed the latest proposal on how to handle methane emissions on federal lands.

“The previous administration scorned domestic energy development and crafted the prior rule to deliberately stifle” energy production, said Bishop, R-Utah.

The new rule will “promote investment in federal and tribal lands so that economies in the West can grow,” he said.

Fred Krupp, president of the Environmental Defense Fund, said the Obama-era rule required oil and gas companies to “take common-sense and cost-effective measures to reduce preventable leaks and venting of methane” at drilling sites.

The new proposal by Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke “would only serve to reward the least responsible actors in industry at a time when other companies are moving forward to tackle methane waste,” Krupp said, citing a voluntary program by large energy companies to reduce methane emissions at drilling sites nationwide.

A program backed by the American Petroleum Institute, the top lobbying group for the oil and gas industry, is intended to encourage drillers to find and fix leaks and take other steps to reduce the escape of natural gas into the atmosphere during drilling operations.

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  1. Avatar for hquain hquain says:

    Re methane as a potent greenhouse gas.

    “While CO2 persists in the atmosphere for centuries, or even millennia, methane warms the planet on steroids for a decade or two before decaying to CO2. In those short decades, methane warms the planet by 86 times as much as CO2, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.”

  2. Mr. Mueller? Sir? Any chance of arresting Trump and his entire crime family this week? Rico Act Violation would be fine if Obstruction of Justice and Collusion take too long–

  3. If there was a map they’d be all over it.

  4. “The previous administration scorned domestic energy development and crafted the prior rule to deliberately stifle” energy production, said Bishop, R-Utah.

    No, the Obama administration just thought that public health (you know…people staying alive and not getting sick) and the environment where we all live and climate change that causes more major catastrophic events like hurricanes, are just as important as corporate profits. And Obama didn’t stifle domestic energy production - it increased during his time in office.

  5. Avatar for jmacaz jmacaz says:

    I wish someone would restrict the methane emissions coming from 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.

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