Guest Blog: Save the BLM Methane Rule

Guest Blog: Save the BLM Methane Rule

Gas flaring

Let’s not throw the baby out with the bathwater

Tell Sen. Cory Gardner to support the BLM Methane Rule
CALL NOW: 202-224-5941

By Kristin Winn

In the ongoing discussion about Congress doing away with the recently passed regulation on the flaring and waste of methane, we seem to have lost sight of several key issues that concern me. Why are we so willing to allow oil and gas companies to waste a public resource by flaring off methane and not fixing leaks? And yes, Colorado has already passed a state rule that requires leaks to be fixed and venting kept to a minimum, but here in western Colorado, we see the results of air pollution from the west being blown into our cities and towns, fouling our air as well. Air pollution knows no boundaries, and the Uintah Basin of Utah, right on Colorado’s western border, has air quality that exceeded federal ozone standards on many occasions. I personally saw this pollution with my own eyes on a recent trip with an infrared camera that revealed methane and other emissions coming off oil and gas storage tanks in Utah.

Picture of Grand Junction's infamous inversion, a cloud of pollution from CO and UT that collects in our valley.

Grand Junction’s infamous inversion, a cloud of pollution from Colorado and Utah that collects in the valley during the cold months. A recent trip to the Uintah Basin captured this cross-border air pollution on camera, click picture to view.

If energy development is such a high priority for our country, and energy independence so important to our national economy, I would expect that conserving energy resources and not wasting gas through leaks and flaring (burning) should also be very important. However, the recent move by the House of Representatives in Washington to use the Congressional Review Act (CRA) to overturn this rule is extremely short-sighted. Rep. Tipton voted for the CRA resolution to get rid of the BLM’s rule.

Regardless of industry comments to the contrary, this rule went through a long, extensive public process before it was approved. I myself felt so strongly about this rule that I traveled six hours to Denver (due to a travel restriction on I-70) to be there in person to testify in favor of this rule. Many others traveled great distances as well to participate in other public meetings, and 300,000 public comments were considered by the BLM before the rule was finalized.

Natural gas pollution (in particular, the volatile organic compounds, or VOCs, that come out of the ground with methane) is a contributor to ground-level (bad) ozone, which causes air pollution and can make it extremely difficult for children and older adults such as myself to breathe. Air pollution aggravates asthma and COPD, contributes to heart attacks and strokes, and kills millions of people each year worldwide. We’ve all seen the horrible pictures of what air pollution can look like if we don’t address the problem.

I spent 20 years working in public affairs in municipal government, conducting hundreds of public meetings and open houses. One of the most frequent criticisms I heard from the public was “our opinion doesn’t matter.” I spent a lot of time assuring people that it does, especially at the local level. Congress needs to take seriously the concerns expressed by the public about the waste and loss of public resources when methane is allowed to leak, or be vented or flared.

Photo courtesy of worc.org

The BLM’s rule cracks down on flaring, but is now at risk of being overturned. Sen. Gardner (R-CO) could cast the decisive vote. Photo courtesy of worc.org

I hope the extremists in Congress who are pursuing the use of the CRA to reverse the BLM’s methane rule will reconsider. If the CRA passes to reverse the methane rule, what’s worse is that Congress will be hamstrung from addressing this issue again in the future. This is not good government. Good government means identifying problems (the waste of public resources from the leaks and flaring of methane, for instance) and formulating a solution. I felt that the methane rules that were passed were well thought-out and a great step in eliminating that waste.

The rule’s fate still hangs in the balance as the Senate considers whether or not to keep the rule. Fortunately, some republican Senators have recently announced they would vote no on the CRA. Sen. Lindsay Graham recently told Politico: “I think the CRA approach to this particular issue is heavy-handed because if you do away with this regulation, you can’t have a similar one.” Other conservatives have weighed in on the issue and support keeping the rule, saying simply that “waste is not conservative.” I agree.

The BLM has a legal mandate to reduce the waste of public resources. Doing so has the added benefit of helping to eliminate air pollution. If we can eliminate some of that pollution, reduce waste and save taxpayer dollars, that’s what I would call good governance.

I urge our Congressional delegation, and especially Sen. Cory Gardner, who is still undecided, not to throw the baby out with the bathwater by overturning the methane rule through the use of the CRA. The Senate is expected to vote on the rule this week.

I hope you’ll join me in calling on Sen. Gardner to support keeping the BLM methane rule.

Tell Sen. Cory Gardner to support the BLM Methane Rule
CALL NOW: 202-224-5941

Thank you!

Kristin Winn

Kristin Winn

About the author

Emily stepped up as our staff director in 2017, but originally joined our team as a community organizer in 2013. Born and raised on the Western Slope, Emily graduated from Colorado State University and then had the privilege of learning from and working alongside organizers in Central and South America as well as Appalachian coal country. They returned to their home state to protect the land they love and work with fellow Coloradans for a healthy, just and self-reliant future for our rural communities. Emily enjoys organizing, exploring the Colorado Plateau, country music and punk concerts with equal passion.

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