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High rates of methane spewing from U.S. Permian oilfield operations - report

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - Methane continues to escape at a high rate from oil and gas operations in the Permian Basin, according to an aerial survey released yesterday that detected major methane plumes from 40% of 900 sites that were measured.

The latest research conducted by the Environmen­tal Defense Fund via helicopter during the first two weeks of November found that 14% of those plumes were the result of malfunctio­ning flares.

Researcher­s also found that at one-third of smaller wells significan­t emissions persisted for days. The aerial survey of the largest U.S. oilfield showed that leaks arose from different pieces of equipment at different times.

This was the eighth aerial survey conducted by EDF's PermianMAP initiative, which monitors methane from the upstream, downstream and midstream operations in the oilfield. The survey comes weeks after the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency proposed the first regulation­s targeting methane from the country's existing oil and gas facilities.

The Biden administra­tion also set a goal to reduce 30% of all methane emissions by 2030 as part of its participat­ion in the Global Methane Pledge, which was formally launched at the U.N. Climate summit in Glasgow. “This research makes clear that the agency (EPA) must tackle frequent, large emissions from smaller wells if we’re going to have a shot at achieving our climate goals and protecting communitie­s from air pollution,” said Jon Goldstein, senior director of regulatory and legislativ­e affairs at the EDF.

Oil and gas companies that operate in the Permian have tried to show they intend to address the high rate of methane emissions from the basin ahead of the forthcomin­g EPA rules.

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