Boston Herald

Wyo. judge halts clean-air rule on methane emissions

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The on-again, off-again effort to restrict methane emissions on federal lands is off — again.

A federal judge in Wyoming has halted the cleanair rule indefinite­ly, saying it “makes little sense” to force oil and gas companies to comply with the Obama-era rule when the Trump administra­tion has moved to roll back the 2016 regulation.

The Interior Department is accepting comments on its proposed rewrite and expects to issue a final rule this summer.

In the meantime, Judge Scott Skavdahl said enforcing the earlier rule would provide “minimal public benefit” while imposing potentiall­y significan­t costs on industry.

“Sadly, and frustratin­gly, this case is symbolic of the dysfunctio­n in the current state of administra­tive law,” Skavdahl wrote in an 11-page opinion Wednesday in Casper, Wyo. “Unfortunat­ely, it is not the first time this dysfunctio­n has frustrated the administra­tive review process in this court.”

Skavdahl’s ruling is the latest in a back-and-forth series of court decisions and administra­tive actions as the Trump administra­tion tries to weaken or delay a rule imposed in the waning days of the Obama administra­tion.

The November 2016 rule forced energy companies to capture methane gas burned off or wasted at drilling sites on public lands.

Methane emissions are a key contributo­r to climate change. Methane, the main component of natural gas, is far more potent at trapping heat than carbon dioxide but does not stay in the air as long.

Many companies consider the federal rule unnecessar­y and overly intrusive and note that companies have an economic incentive to capture the methane so they can sell it.

A federal judge in San Francisco reinstated the rule in February, even as the Trump administra­tion proposed a new one that would significan­tly weaken the original.

Courts in Wyoming and California have issued conflictin­g opinions on the rule, and a bid by Congress to overturn the measure failed in the Republican-controlled Senate.

Dan Naatz, vice president of government affairs for the Independen­t Petroleum Associatio­n of America, cheered the latest court decision.

“A new rule is coming out,” he said. “The agency is taking comments on it now.” Trying to enforce the Obama-era rule in the meantime would only cause confusion, he added.

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