Letter to the Hon. Ryan Zinke, Secretary of Interior - NM Democrats, 106 Senators & House Members to Zinke: Don't Let BLM Rescind the Methane Rule

Letter

By: Jared Huffman, Jackie Speier, Ted Lieu, Scott Peters, Ed Perlmutter, Hank Johnson, Jr., Martin Heinrich, Jerry McNerney, Zoe Lofgren, Nanette Barragán, Diana DeGette, Kathy Castor, Tulsi Gabbard, Raul Grijalva, Mark DeSaulnier, Adam Schiff, Alan Lowenthal, Jared Polis, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Dan Lipinski, Jim McGovern, Mike Capuano, Debbie Dingell, Bennie Thompson, Don Payne, Jr., Nydia Velázquez, Paul Tonko, Matt Cartwright, Gerry Connolly, Adam Smith, Michael Bennet, Chris Coons, Dick Durbin, Chris Van Hollen, Jr., Amy Klobuchar, Cory Booker, Kirsten Gillibrand, Bob Casey, Jr., Bernie Sanders, Doris Matsui, Anna Eshoo, Lucille Roybal-Allard, Susan Davis, Eleanor Norton, Colleen Hanabusa, Jan Schakowsky, Katherine Clark, John Sarbanes, Keith Ellison, Carol Shea-Porter, Ben Luján, Jr., Adriano Espaillat, Earl Blumenauer, Donald McEachin, Rick Larsen, Dianne Feinstein, Chris Murphy, Brian Schatz, Ed Markey, Debbie Stabenow, Jeanne Shaheen, Catherine Cortez Masto, Ron Wyden, Tim Kaine, Maria Cantwell, Mike Quigley, Niki Tsongas, Bill Keating, Betty McCollum, David Price, Michelle Lujan Grisham, Jerry Nadler, Suzanne Bonamici, Jim Langevin, Peter Welch, Mark Pocan, Richard Blumenthal, Bill Nelson, Sr., Elizabeth Warren, Angus King, Jr., Tina Smith, Tom Udall, Sherrod Brown, Jack Reed, Patty Murray, Bill Foster, Seth Moulton, Jamie Raskin, Emanuel Cleaver II, Frank Pallone, Jr., Kathleen Rice, Joe Crowley, Peter DeFazio, Don Beyer, Jr., Pramila Jayapal, Kamala Harris, Tom Carper, Mazie Hirono, Ben Cardin, Gary Peters, Maggie Hassan, Chuck Schumer, Jeff Merkley, Patrick Leahy, Tammy Baldwin
Date: April 19, 2018
Location: Washington, DC

Dear Mr. Secretary:

We write in strong opposition to the Bureau of Land Management's (BLM) recent proposal to revise the 2016 Methane Waste Prevention rule. The proposed revisions sacrifice public health, will increase climate changing emissions, and deny American taxpayers royalties from natural resources they own for negligible or uncertain private gains. Experience with state level regulations and BLM's own analysis demonstrate that BLM's concerns about the negative impact of the 2016 Methane Waste Prevention rule are misplaced.

The 2016 rule revised BLM regulations that had not been updated in over three decades. Due to developments in horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, among other factors, oil and gas development on public lands has increased, leading to increased risks to clean air and water, human health, wildlife, and local communities. The outdated regulations failed to account for the intervening 35 years' worth of technological advancement to reduce the waste and the environmental impact of venting and flaring methane gas.

Every year an estimated $2 billion dollars' worth of natural gas is wasted by the oil and gas industry nationwide, with $330 million of that being drawn from public or Tribal lands. Weakening the rule or returning to the status quo ante would be a giveaway to the oil and gas extraction industry at the expense of the American taxpayer. BLM's own analysis of the proposed rescission estimates that an additional 1.8 million tons of methane, 2.67 million tons of other volatile organic compounds and 20,030 tons of hazardous air pollutants would be released over 10 years. These compounds, once released, will react with nitrogen oxides in the atmosphere and form ozone and smog. The negative impact on public health and the environment of these increased emissions would be enormous.

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has repeatedly highlighted the opportunities that capturing natural gas that would otherwise be vented or flared represents. In 2016 BLM, found that complying with the 2016 rule, with its numerous health and fiscal benefits to taxpayers, would only reduce average company profits by 0.15 percent. Accounting for the increased revenue from selling the captured natural gas actually generates a net economic benefit of $46 million annually for the oil and gas industry. BLM's own analysis of the newly proposed rule estimates that repealing these waste prevention measures would lead to more waste, less production and less revenue to taxpayers -- roughly $30 million of royalties would be lost over ten years, along with 299 billion cubic feet of natural gas. The DOI's rationale for returning to the previous rule clearly conflicts with experience from similar regulations at the state level. In particular, the methane capture rules enacted by Colorado in 2014 have not led to an industry exodus from Colorado, job losses, or the shutting-in of marginal wells, despite these state rules being more stringent than the 2016 Methane Waste Prevention rule. What's more, methane waste reduction rules, like Colorado's, help create jobs in the methane mitigation industry. A recent study indicates that over 130 companies, with customers in almost every state across the country, are helping to manufacture the technology and provide the services needed to cut methane emissions. And these companies have already experienced up to 30 percent business growth in states with methane regulations.

A federal court has already found that the evidence BLM relied upon did not even support a one year delay in implementing the 2016 BLM Rule, which BLM attempted to enact on December 8, 2017, through the Suspension Rule. On February 22, 2018 the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California found that "the BLM's reasoning behind the Suspension Rule is untethered to evidence contradicting the reasons for implementing the Waste Prevention Rule." The court also found that the plaintiffs had demonstrated that the proposed delay of the rule would cause "irreparable injury" due to the increased air pollution and health impacts, and negative impact on the global climate. The court's strong language underscores the poor reasoning behind the proposed rule, as it contains many of the same analytical weaknesses as the Suspension Rule. These weaknesses are more than sufficient reason to not finalize the proposed rule.

Due to the tremendous public interest in this issue, we request that the public comment period for this rule be extended to 90 days for submissions to both the BLM and the Office of Management and Budget. BLM should also hold public hearings, particularly in the Western U.S., where the bulk of drilling activity on federal lands occurs, to allow more opportunities for public engagement. When the 2016 methane waste rule was proposed, BLM held several public meetings across the Western U.S. and ultimately extended the comment period by several weeks at the request of industry to allow more time for review and comment. We request the same consideration here in order to ensure the voice of the American public is heard. Equally important is meaningful consultation with impacted tribes, and during the comment period BLM should hold individual meetings with each tribe that requests one. We also request that BLM release a climate analysis for this rule accounting for the climate impact and larger social cost of increased methane emissions under the proposed rule.

Sincerely,


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