Houston Chronicle

A&M profs decry leaks of methane from UL land

- By Rachel Adams-Heard

Texas A&M University, the alma mater of Energy Secretary Rick Perry and late hydraulic fracturing pioneer George Mitchell, is under pressure from its own professors to cut methane emitted by oil wells that support the school’s endowment.

The letter, published Wednesday by Environmen­t Texas, is signed by more than 50 professors. It pledges support for a plan to cut methane emissions by 50 percent in the next five years from lands and interests overseen by University Lands, which manages them on behalf of an endowment that benefits the Texas A&M and University of Texas systems.

That organizati­on, referred to as UL in the letter, oversees the surface and mineral interests of 2.1 million acres of land in West Texas and leases more than 9,000 oil and gas wells to more than 300 operators, which would make it the fifth-largest oil company in Texas if pooled into one entity, the professors said.

Methane, a greenhouse gas more potent than carbon dioxide and the main component of natural gas, is under increasing scrutiny amid growing concerns about climate change. The professors cite studies, including some by A&M researcher­s, that show methane is often released or escapes into the atmosphere during oil and gas production.

“While greenhouse gas-reducing measures are being practiced on A&M campus, they are being undermined, if not negated many times over, by the methane emissions on UL land,” the letter said. “By simply requiring oil and gas producers to use industry best practices on the land it manages, UL could … establish itself as a worthy extension of A&M’s high standards and commitment to energy innovation and the environmen­t.”

In 2016, a representa­tive of UT’s student government signed a letter that pressed then-chancellor William McRaven to “implement climate solutions today that can have immediate and meaningful impact.”

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