EPA: Fossil Fuel Companies No Longer Need to Report Emissions
CGP Grey
In Brief
Under
Scott Pruitt's new version of the EPA, fossil fuel companies will no
longer be required to divulge information pertaining to their greenhouse
gas emissions.
The agency charged with protecting the
environment is perhaps the most vulnerable agency in the federal
government under the new administration.
Loosening the Reigns
Today
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that it will no
longer ask fossil fuel companies to reveal their emissions of certain
greenhouse gases. The decision bears the mark of new EPA Administrator
Scott Pruitt, who has fought the agency on behalf of oil and gas companies for years.
Last year, pursuant to the Clean Air Act, the EPA sent letters
to more than 15,000 oil and gas companies. The letters requested
information about methane and volatile organic compound (VOC) sources to
inform future industry standards. This data would’ve helped the agency
to fight climate change, protect air quality, and safeguard human health
across the nation.
As if the need for
emissions reporting was ever questionable, Pruitt has given companies
free reign to pollute with plausible deniability. Several attorneys
general from fossil fuel-producing states sent a letter to Pruitt yesterday, urging him to withdraw the EPA’s request. Today he made the change.
“It’s
absurd that one of Scott Pruitt’s first acts is to refuse information
on a dangerous pollutant,” said Melinda Pierce, legislative director at
the Sierra Club.
The public process around the draft request was lengthy,
and involved two comment periods before a final request was made.
Ironically, many from the oil and gas industry supported the need for
more transparency in this space.
But now, it appears the EPA will
be flying blind when it comes to fighting atmospheric pollution. It’s
unclear whether the agency has a contingency plan for monitoring the
thousands of fossil fuel projects within the United States. Smog covered LA. Photo credit: Steven Buss/Flickr
Vulnerable EPA
“It’s
telling oil and gas companies to go ahead and withhold basic
information about pollution from the public. It erodes the confidence of
the American people that the EPA is prepared to fairly oversee the oil
and gas industry,” Mark Brownstein, vice president of the Environmental
Defense Fund’s Climate and Energy Program, told me.
The EPA currently collects emissions stats under its Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program, but notes
“there is a reporting threshold, and the reporting requirements do not
currently cover certain emission sources.” This means its data isn’t
necessarily representative of “the entire universe of emissions,” and
also doesn’t include insights on equipment, facility design, or
performance of operations.
I reached out to EPA representatives
asking how it will acquire this data in the future, but did not receive
an immediate response.
In a statement today, Pruitt said: “By
taking this step, EPA is signaling that we take these concerns seriously
and are committed to strengthening our partnership with the states.
Today’s action will reduce burdens on businesses while we take a closer
look at the need for additional information from this industry.”
Methane,
which has a more significant warming effect than other greenhouse
gases, is especially concerning to climate scientists. It’s been
skyrocketing due to an increase in domestic natural gas production. Last
year, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration discovered
that methane emissions were 60 percent higher than previous estimates.
The
EPA has been one of the Trump administration’s most vulnerable targets
when it comes to reform. So far, the agency has undergone a gag order,
political vetting, and threats of major staffing cuts.
“Just
because he doesn’t want to hear the truth on the dangers of methane
from oil and gas operations, doesn’t make it any less dangerous to the
millions of Americans that are forced to breathe this pollutant in on a
daily basis,” Pierce added. source
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