Report warns oil and gas to cut air pollution, New Mexico takes action
Methane emitted by oil and gas operations must be cut significantly to avoid dire climate effects, according to an international report issued Wednesday, as fossil fuel producers and the State of New Mexico took action to limit air pollution from energy development.
Issued by the International Energy Agency (IEA), the report contended declining demand for fossil fuels would not alone lead to a reduction in methane emissions that could avoid global warming, advocating for industry and government-led actions.
The report said such actions were needed to prevent global warming of more than 1.5 degrees Celsius, an benchmark set by the international community that could lead to catastrophic weather and other events.
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“Rapid cut” in methane emissions could stop up to 0.1 degrees Celsius of global warming, the report read, by the mid-century – a bigger impact than taking all cars and trucks in the world off the road.
This could also benefit public health, the report read, as greenhouse gasses like methane contribute to respiratory problems and long-term health problems.
“As methane emissions lead to ground-level ozone pollution, immediate action would also deliver public health, food security and economic benefits,” read the report.
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IEA Executive Director Faith Birol said reducing methane emissions from the oil and gas sector was “one of the best and most affordable ways” to limit global warming when coupled with declining demand for fossil fuel and reductions in carbon dioxide (CO2).
“Early actions by governments and industry to drive down methane emissions need to go hand-in-hand with reductions in fossil fuel demand and CO2 emissions,” Birol said. “This report sets out the clear case for strong, swift action.”
The report estimated methane pollution accounted for about 30 percent of the rise in global temperatures and was the second-largest contributor to global warming after CO2.
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Methane emissions from human activities appeared set to rise by 13 percent between 2020 and 2030, the report read, but they need to fall by 30 to 60 percent to avoid 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming.
Cutting emissions from oil and gas would account for about half of this reduction, read the report.
Inger Anderson, executive director of the United National Environment Program (UNEP) said cutting methane from oil and gas was “low-hanging fruit” when it came to reducing air pollution worldwide.
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“Investments in maintenance and operational changes that prevent methane from leaking into the atmosphere are a fraction of profits made from fossil fuels,” Anderson said. “This is in stark contrast to the cost of inaction, from crop productivity losses, to impacts on human health and the economy.”
What is New Mexico doing to cut fossil fuel pollution?
New Mexico is home to part of the Permian Basin, the U.S.’ busiest oilfield producing about 5.8 million barrels of crude per day (bpd), almost half of about 12 million bpd nationwide.
It led to New Mexico rising during the recent boom in production to second in the U.S. in oil, after Texas with which New Mexico shares the Permian.
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The economic benefit also brought worsening air pollution in the state, said Jon Goldstein with the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), necessitating strong government action.
That came in the form of two rulemakings at the state’s Oil Conservation Division (OCD) and Environment Department (NMED) in 2021 and 2022, respectively.
The OCD’s rules banned routine flaring, the burning of excess natural gas, and required all operators capture 98 percent of produced gas by 2026.
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NMED targeted ground-level ozone, a cancer-causing pollutant created when chemicals emitted into the air by oil and gas operations interact with sunlight, adding leak detection and repair requirements, along with requirements that facilities be outfitted with new technologies to prevent emissions.
These regulations should be a model for the rest of the world, Goldstein said Wednesday as the IEA report was released, to prevent environmental damage brought on by the energy sector.
“Efforts to get regulations in place are critical. There are a lot of people that are pushing rightly for a transition away from oil and gas and to cleaner forms of energy,” he said.
“Even…
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