Look West: Public lands and energy news from the Center for Western Priorities

Big oil tries to avoid methane accountability

Wednesday, February 15, 2023
Methane flaring in West Texas. Photo: Jonathan Cutrer, CC-BY 2.0

The oil industry is worried about a Biden administration plan to crack down on methane super emitters. Reuters reports that industry groups are opposed to an EPA proposal that would let approved third parties with remote sensing technology report large methane leaks.

Companies that are notified of the leaks would have to take corrective actions within 10 days—a timeline that oil CEOs would rather stretch out, knowing that the EPA is notoriously understaffed and unable to respond quickly on its own.

"Our concerns are ultimately that this kind of program can have a chilling effect on companies' ability to work with EPA," Frank Macchiarola, senior vice president of regulatory affairs at the American Petroleum Institute, said on Monday. The American Exploration and Production Council said in its written comments that it specifically objected to letting "private entities, such as activist NGO groups" publicly report super emitters and require follow up action by polluters.

It's clear why oil companies would worry about more methane transparency and accountability. Last year, the Environmental Defense Fund and Carbon Mapper used methane detection technology to locate 30 methane super emitters across the Permian Basin in New Mexico and Texas. Those sites account for only 0.001 percent of the Permian's oil and gas infrastructure but emit around 100,000 tons of methane every year.

Clarification

Tuesday's Look West referenced a Colorado Newsline article with concerns from the National Parks Conservation Association about Bureau of Land Management plans to lease 60,000 acres of land west of Rocky Mountain National Park. That particular lease sale was offered in 2019, not 2023.

Quick hits

Colorado may create state building codes on wildfire-prone areas

Colorado Sun

Bogus “no trespassing” signs could carry $50,000 fines in Wyoming

Cowboy State Daily

Sportsmen decry Montana bill removing marijuana tax from habitat funding

Missoula Current

Biden: Oil and gas are “not going to all go away”

E&E News

Murkowski warns Biden against trying to shrink Willow oil and gas project

Alaska Public Media

California's snowpack is melting faster than ever, leaving less available water

Los Angeles Times

Reward offered for suspects who vandalized dinosaur tracks on Utah/Arizona border

12News | KSL

How humans break up wolf packs

High Country News

Quote of the day
”We hire people that crawl into caves. There’s parks with archaeologists. There’s parks with people that dress up in period costumes and speak only in a particular time period … there’s the underwater archaeologists.”
—Timpanogos Cave National Monument program manager Cami McKinney on what it takes to be a park ranger, Deseret News
Picture this

@usfws

Love is a gentle nuzzle in a flowering meadow 💚🤎💜

Photo: Diana Robinson
Twitter
Facebook
Medium
Instagram
Copyright © 2023 Center for Western Priorities, All rights reserved.
You've signed up to receive Look West updates.

Center for Western Priorities
1999 Broadway
Suite 520
Denver, CO 80202

Add us to your address book

View this on the web

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list