BLM Tackles Waste, Methane Pollution On Federal And Tribal Lands

In an important step forward in curbing methane emissions from the nation's oil and gas sector, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) today announced a regulatory proposal aimed at wasteful practices that shortchange taxpayers, squander energy resources and threaten the Earth's climate.  The proposal, which will apply to both new and existing oil and gas facilities, begins to fill an important gap left by the EPA in August when that agency proposed to reduce emissions only from future facilities, ignoring the millions of oil and gas emissions sources already in operation.

Oil and gas companies that operate on our nation's federal and tribal lands are exploiting a resource that belongs to the public and the Native American tribes.  These operators should be held to the highest standards when it comes to avoiding the waste of the resource and minimizing the pollution from their activities.

BLM is the federal agency in charge of managing these public and tribal resources.  But the agency's regulatory structure is woefully out-of-date and much too permissive of wasteful and inefficient practices.

In 2013, operators leaked, vented and flared 109 billion cubic feet of gas from operations on federal and tribal lands, enough gas to heat 1.5 million homes for a year.  From an environmental perspective, these operators emitted 1 million metric tons of methane to the atmosphere, the same near-term climate impact as the pollution from 23 coal-fired power plants or 19 million automobiles.

This wasted gas also means that companies are simply not paying millions of dollars in royalties rightly owed to U.S. taxpayers money that should be going to fund schools and roads and other needs in our communities instead of being pocketed by industry.

Today, BLM announced that it is rising to the methane waste challenge by proposing a strong but feasible and cost-effective set of regulations to crack down on waste of the public's resource.  Following the path of leading states, such as Colorado and Wyoming, BLM has proposed requiring operators to improve the efficiency of both existing and future operations by:

  • Prohibiting the harmful practice of venting gas to the atmosphere;
  • reducing flaring by (1) placing a volumetric limit on the amount of gas an operator can flare and (2) requiring the submission of gas capture plans with all applications for permits to drill (APDs);
  • conducting regular ins...