Albuquerque Journal

New Mexico climate task force releases report

Gov. says state will step up to challenge

- BY DAN BOYD AND THERESA DAVIS JOURNAL STAFF WRITERS

A New Mexico climate change task force released its first report Thursday, citing progress that has been made to combat the “climate crisis” and recommenda­tions for the state climate strategy.

Among other findings, the task force said New Mexico produced more than 66 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions in 2018 — about 1% of the national total. The state is home to about 0.6% of the nation’s population, according to U.S. Census Bureau estimates.

Overall, New Mexicans produce 31 tons of greenhouse gas emissions per person per year, the report found. The national average is 18 tons per person.

“It is not hyperbole to suggest the stakes are higher than perhaps ever before in human history,” Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said in the introducti­on to the 28-page report, while adding that New Mexico would “step up” to the challenge.

Lujan Grisham, a Democrat, ordered Cabinet secretarie­s to

head up the New Mexico Interagenc­y Climate Change Task Force soon after taking office in January, while also ordering New Mexico to join a coalition of other states formed in 2017 after President Donald Trump announced the U.S. withdrawal from the Paris Agreement.

In its report released Thursday, the task force recommends that state agencies “pick up the pace of our work” to reach the emission targets set by the Energy Transition Act, a landmark renewable energy bill passed during this year’s 60-day legislativ­e session.

New Mexico is already experienci­ng the effects of climate change, according to the report, which cites hotter and longer summers, more intense storms, more frequent droughts, and declining air and water quality.

“Even with current and planned policies to reduce our emissions, we will likely fall short of our goals without a broader marketbase­d program to reduce carbon usage and emissions,” the report reads.

Meanwhile, the report’s release comes as New Mexico revenue has skyrockete­d to record levels — an estimated $7.9 billion in the current budget year — due primarily to an ongoing oil production boom in the state’s southeast corner.

State lawmakers used the budgetary windfall during this year’s session to increase New Mexico teacher salaries, restore depleted cash reserves and appropriat­e nearly $400 million for highway constructi­on and repairs statewide.

Lujan Grisham has faced criticism from some environmen­tal advocacy groups for not doing more to address climate change, but recently said New Mexico is taking more decisive steps toward a renewable energy-based economy than many other states.

“I think for activists it’s pretty terrifying to see a state pretty quickly grow to be (one of the top oil-producing states) and I can completely respect that response,” Lujan Grisham told the Journal in a recent interview.

The climate change report released Thursday found that the oil and natural gas sector contribute­d the largest percentage of the state’s greenhouse gas emissions last year at 24%.

The transporta­tion sector was second with 22% of the state’s emissions, followed by electricit­y at 18%, other industry at 18%, agricultur­e at 11% and the commercial and residentia­l sector at 6%.

The report also cites reducing methane emissions from oil and gas through statewide regulation­s as the “highest priority” for New Mexico’s energy transition.

Methane makes up 31% of New Mexico’s emissions. Nationally, methane is 10% of emissions. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency has acknowledg­ed that methane contribute­s to global temperatur­e increases.

More than 60% of the state’s methane emissions come from the oil and gas industry, while that sector contribute­s 31% of national methane emissions.

However, the state’s overall greenhouse gas emissions declined by 5% from 2005 to 2018, according to the report. The decline was attributed to the 2017 closure of two units at the coal-fired San Juan Generating Station.

The report references the state partnershi­p with Santa Fe-based data company Descartes Labs to monitor methane leaks in real time using satellite imagery and weather patterns.

Jon Goldstein, director of regulatory and legislativ­e affairs for the Environmen­tal Defense Fund, said New Mexico “should be proud” of the initiative­s Lujan Grisham and her administra­tion have introduced to address climate change.

Goldstein is the former Cabinet secretary of New Mexico’s

Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department and the former deputy secretary of the state’s environmen­t department. The EDF is working to measure methane emissions in the Permian Basin to help create an accurate database of pollutant sources.

“What the next year holds will be critical,” Goldstein said. “Getting enforceabl­e, nationally-leading methane pollution-reducing regulation­s on the books will help protect the lungs and the livelihood of New Mexicans who deserve clean air and a safe environmen­t.”

While environmen­tal groups praised the report, organizati­ons like Power the Future took issue with the state’s initiative­s.

“This is a love letter to radical environmen­talists disguised as a government report,” said Larry Behrens, western states director for the group. “The ideas presented will kill energy jobs in our state while green corporatio­ns will reap the profits. In just one example, the authors of the report suggest New Mexicans spend more on adoption of all-electric vehicles while the Governor won’t give up her gas-guzzling SUV.”

The state has establishe­d a Methane Advisory Panel to discuss industry strategies. The panel is composed of petroleum engineers, scientists, environmen­tal attorneys and individual­s from Los Alamos National Laboratory, the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology and Colorado State University.

A report from the Methane Advisory Panel is expected to be available for public comment by mid-December.

In addition, the report details the Lujan Grisham administra­tion’s effort to reduce emissions from the transporta­tion sector, in part by purchasing cleaner vehicles.

This year New Mexico will spend $1.5 million for electric vehicle charging stations in Santa Fe County and $1 million for electric vehicles for the state fleet.

New Mexico has invested $32 million in installing solar panels at 19 state offices in Santa Fe. The state wants to expand those energy efficiency projects to homes and businesses.

“We (also) need to prioritize transporta­tion infrastruc­ture that serves more than just cars, like public transit and bicycleand-pedestrian-friendly streets,” the report reads.

The task force will release another progress report in September 2020. Informatio­n about the state’s climate strategy is available at https://openei.org/wiki/Climate_Action_Plan_ (New_Mexico).

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