Houston Chronicle

Texas probes failure to report gas release

- By David Wethe, Zachary Mider and Aaron Clark

Texas is investigat­ing why pipeline operator Targa Resources Corp. failed to report an unexpected release of tons of natural gas within 24 hours, as required by state regulation­s.

Targa disclosed the incident two weeks after it happened and within eight hours after Bloomberg emailed the Houston-based company a satellite image that appears to show a significan­t cloud of methane near one of its compressor stations in Midland County, Texas. The Jan. 20 incident in the heart of the Permian Basin, the world’s largest shale oil field, wasn’t reported to state regulators until 4:42 p.m. local time on Feb. 3.

Companies operating in Texas must promptly notify regulators when a malfunctio­n causes the release of more hazardous pollutants than permits allow. The energy industry is under pressure to control emissions releases because methane, the primary component of natural gas, has a particular­ly devastatin­g impact on the climate. Fossil fuel firms that can’t control emissions risk playing a diminished role in the energy transition as buyers increasing­ly seek producers with cleaner records.

Targa said the January incident happened when the station’s compressor­s shut down unexpected­ly because of a broken belt, according to its February filing to the Texas Commission on Environmen­tal Quality. To avoid a dangerous buildup of pressure, safety valves released gas directly into the atmosphere between 10:13 a.m. and 1:33 p.m.

The release matched the timing and location of two satellite observatio­ns that appeared to show methane spewing from near the company’s Germania compressor station.

The U.S. Geological Survey’s Landsat 8 satellite observed a plume of gas at 11:21 a.m. and the European Space Agency’s Sentinel-2 satellite detected a release at 11:36 a.m., according to Kayrros SAS. The geoanalyti­cs agency estimated the emissions rate of the plume at 21 metric tons an hour.

Targa said in a statement to Bloomberg that it released 10 tons of methane during repairs. That’s equal to the short-term climate impact of the annual emissions of more than 150 U.S. cars. Targa didn’t answer additional questions, including why it did not initially report the event to regulators.

Owners and operators of regulated entities in Texas must submit initial notificati­ons to the state regulator within 24 hours of discovery if an emissions event exceeds reportable quantities. Final reports must be submitted within two weeks.

The investigat­ion of the Targa incident is ongoing, the Texas regulator said in a statement. “Based on the results of an investigat­ion of a reportable incident the TCEQ may pursue enforcemen­t actions when appropriat­e against regulated entities which may include the assessment of a penalty.’’

In the United States, operators are set to face fines from the Environmen­tal Protection Agency through rules that will take effect next year if their methane emissions exceed limits, with an initial fee starting at $900 per metric ton.

Targa is the second fossil fuel operator to disclose emissions containing methane to regulators after Bloomberg shared satellite images with the companies that appear to show releases of the potent greenhouse gas near their assets.

New approaches to processing high-resolution observatio­ns from public satellites are allowing scientists to detect and attribute methane emissions with far greater precision. The invisible, odorless gas has more than 80 times the warming power of carbon dioxide during its first 20 years in the atmosphere and is responsibl­e for approximat­ely 30 percent of Earth’s warming since the Industrial Revolution.

Halting methane emissions could do more to slow climate change than almost any other single measure.

This isn’t the first time Targa has faced scrutiny for its emissions. When a polar blast hit Texas two years ago, triggering widespread power outages and mechanical failures, many industrial facilities burned off or released huge quantities of hazardous gases as they shut down. The worst culprits were two gas processing plants run by Targa that accounted for almost 20 percent of the state’s total pollution during the freeze, according to analysis of state records by Air Alliance Houston, Environmen­t Texas and the Environmen­tal Defense Fund.

Although in rare cases deliberate releases from energy operations may be necessary to relieve pressure and avoid a potential explosion, many intentiona­l emissions can be avoided through rigorous maintenanc­e and equipment upgrades.

 ?? Jonah M. Kessel/New York Times ?? Gas is flared at the Targa Driver Gas Plant Nov. 5, 2019, in the Permian Basin. The state is now investigat­ing why the operator failed to report a Jan. 20 incident on time.
Jonah M. Kessel/New York Times Gas is flared at the Targa Driver Gas Plant Nov. 5, 2019, in the Permian Basin. The state is now investigat­ing why the operator failed to report a Jan. 20 incident on time.

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