Albuquerque Journal

NM needs Congress to pass climate fixes

- BY GILL M. SORG COUNCIL DISTRICT 5, MAYOR PRO TEM EMERITUS, LAS CRUCES

Right now, Congress has a critical chance to fix the broken and outdated oil and gas leasing system that allows this country’s resources to be relentless­ly depleted at a catastroph­ic cost to the climate, public health, and the rights of Indigenous and local communitie­s.

We must face the truth head on. The federal oil and gas leasing program is rife with wasteful speculativ­e leasing practices and loopholes that allow companies responsibl­e for toxic water spills to evade any penalties and shift the cleanup costs to taxpayers. The current system allows these companies to nominate lands they want to drill, purchase leases at obscenely low rates, and deprive local government­s of much-needed revenue by paying outdated, low royalty rates to taxpayers. In New Mexico alone, almost 4.3 million acres are currently leased for potential developmen­t. Beyond the exploitati­on of resources themselves, the Indigenous communitie­s that have witnessed their sacred land being destroyed deserve recompense.

Since I was elected to the Las Cruces City Council in 2009, we have passed our own Climate Action Plan, which calls for a 50% reduction in greenhouse gases by 2030 and 100% by the 2040s, which includes converting to an all-electric transporta­tion system and phasing out natural gas use in the city. But local resources can only do so much or go so far. We need a federal commitment to provide the necessary support to make sweeping changes throughout the state, community by community, in a way that doesn’t abandon oil and gas workers, and economies.

In April, President Biden pledged to help mitigate the climate consequenc­es of the previous administra­tion by cutting greenhouse gases in half by 2030, nine short years from now. That means effective climate policy would have to go into effect this decade — at last — but the federal oil and gas leasing program still must be overhauled to address the climate crisis, fairly compensate taxpayers and local landowners, and support communitie­s in the transition away from fossil fuels.

Local elected leaders have a responsibi­lity to take and support critical and logical actions to mitigate the devastatin­g impacts of climate change by reducing our communitie­s’ carbon footprint, and I’m proud of the efforts already underway in New Mexico. But these measures, and cities across the state, would hugely benefit from climate infrastruc­ture in the reconcilia­tion bill. Bipartisan solutions to reform this system are ready and available. As Congress debates the reconcilia­tion package, members must do everything in their power to ensure loopholes are closed, waste is eliminated and protection­s for the people — not Big Oil — are codified in the final text.

The record droughts and dangerous wildfires we’ve seen in recent years make it impossible to misunderst­and: The time for us to act on climate is now.

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