The Oklahoman

Federal judge reinstates Obama-era rule on methane emissions

- BY MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — Rebuffing the Trump administra­tion, a federal judge on Wednesday ordered the Interior Department to reinstate an Obamaera regulation aimed at restrictin­g harmful methane emissions from oil and gas production on federal lands.

The order by a judge in San Francisco came as the Interior Department moved to delay the rule until 2019, saying it was too burdensome to industry. The action followed an earlier effort by Interior to postpone part of the rule set to take effect next year.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Elizabeth Laporte of the Northern District of California said Interior had failed to give a “reasoned explanatio­n” for the changes and had not offered details why an earlier analysis by the Obama administra­tion was faulty. She ordered the entire rule reinstated immediatel­y.

The rule, finalized last November, forces energy companies to capture methane that’s burned off or “flared” at drilling sites on public lands during production because it pollutes the environmen­t. An estimated $330 million a year in methane is wasted through leaks or intentiona­l releases on federal lands, enough to power about 5 million homes a year.

Methane, the primary component of natural gas, is a leading contributo­r to global warming. It is far more potent at trapping heat than carbon dioxide but does not stay in the air as long.

“It’s a good thing the courts are protecting Americans from oil and gas industry pollution, because the Trump administra­tion has completely abdicated that responsibi­lity,” said Michael Saul, a senior attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity, one of the groups that challenged the Trump rule along with California and New Mexico.

“The methane rule puts modest constraint­s on a dirty practice that endangers public health and wastes billions of taxpayer dollars,” Saul said. President Donald Trump and Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke “are not above the law and the court has made it clear: They have to stop putting polluters above the people they were sworn to protect,” Saul said.

The court ruling follows a defeat in Congress, when the Senate unexpected­ly turned back a bid to overturn the methane rule after three Republican­s joined Democrats in voting to uphold it. The vote prompted Interior officials to promise to suspend, revise or rescind the regulation as part of a wider effort by the Trump administra­tion to unravel what it considers burdensome regulation­s imposed by former president Barack Obama.

The methane rule imposes a “significan­t regulatory burden that encumbers American energy production, economic growth and job creation,” especially in North Dakota, Colorado and New Mexico, Interior said.

Environmen­tal groups sharply disagreed.

Rolling back the methane waste rule “makes no sense and is yet another example of the lengths this administra­tion will go to sell out our public lands,” said Jenny Kordick, an energy policy expert for The Wilderness Society.

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