Albuquerque Journal

NM leaders, industry must step up

- BY JON GOLDSTEIN DIRECTOR, REGULATORY AND LEGISLATIV­E AFFAIRS, ENVIRONMEN­TAL DEFENSE ACTION FUND Jon Goldstein is a former Cabinet Secretary of the New Mexico Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department.

It’s been a tough few weeks for New Mexico’s clean air and taxpayers. Like a one-two punch, the Trump administra­tion has moved to roll back Environmen­tal Protection Agency standards designed to protect our air from methane and related oil and gas air pollution. Meanwhile, the federal Bureau of Land Management finalized its repeal of methane waste prevention rules specifical­ly designed to cut the $330 million worth of wasted natural gas — primarily made up of methane — lost from federal and tribal lands every year.

Nowhere will these rollbacks hit harder than in New Mexico. The state is saddled with an ignominiou­s Delaware-sized methane cloud hanging over its San Juan Basin and with as much as $240 million worth of wasted natural gas statewide every year. This means wasted revenue that the state can and should be capturing to invest in urgent needs like education. For instance, if this methane waste and the associated state tax and royalty revenue was captured, the state could increase pre-K enrollment by 50 percent and allow 5,000 more New Mexico kids access to quality early childhood education, according to education advocates New Mexico Voices for Children.

Luckily, the state has the tools at its disposal to be the master of its own methane destiny. We can fix this problem here at the state level, even as the federal government retreats, through sensible, proven requiremen­ts that increase revenue, protect our air and create jobs.

State methane rules have been a success in neighborin­g states. Colorado put a statewide rule in place in 2014, and regulators there have reported dramatic reductions in leaks from oil and gas wells, meanwhile the oil and gas industry has achieved recordbrea­king production levels. Since implementi­ng their rule with the cooperatio­n of three of the largest oil and gas producers in Colorado, the state has also received zero complaints and no lawsuits seeking to block the rule. In fact, just last fall, the Colorado Oil and Gas Associatio­n in conjunctio­n with the Environmen­tal Defense Fund proudly supported further improvemen­ts to the rules to drive even more pollution reductions.

With strong leaders in Santa Fe, New Mexico can do the same. Of the two candidates for governor, one, Democratic U.S. Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, has repeatedly stepped up to defend the federal rules that are good for New Mexico’s clean air and revenues. The other, Republican U.S. Rep. Steve Pearce, has taken every opportunit­y to undermine these sensible requiremen­ts — even sponsoring legislatio­n in Washington that would have blocked funding for the implementa­tion of the BLM methane waste rule.

The oil and gas industry needs to step up, as well. In the face of federal rollbacks, the oil and gas industry is at a crossroads. Leading companies have touted the benefits of cleaner burning natural gas for years, but unchecked methane emissions are erasing the claimed climate benefits of natural gas and, without strong regulation­s in place, there’s no productive role for the fuel to play in a low-carbon future.

The current boom in oil and gas drilling in Southeaste­rn New Mexico’s Permian Basin is a tremendous opportunit­y for New Mexico. With sensible rules including methane pollution and waste requiremen­ts, we can maximize the benefits of this developmen­t and minimize the negative impacts. Without them, the state will be left with even more wasted natural resources and the industry with a Delawaresi­zed hole in its reputation in New Mexico and nationally.

As forward-thinking producers have done in Colorado, Wyoming and elsewhere, New Mexico’s leading oil and gas companies have an opportunit­y to engage positively on state air pollution and natural gas waste reduction requiremen­ts. The time is now.

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