EPA Announces Methane Rules to Care for Communities and Climate

The environmental and climate justice communities in New Mexico celebrated the Environmental Protection Agency’s revised rules on methane emissions, which were posted on Saturday. The announcement was made in conjunction with this year’s global climate summit, known as COP28, in Dubai.

The strengthened rules seek to  

  • Ensure frequent leak detection and repair inspections at all wells, including regular monitoring of small, leak-prone wells. 
  • Stop the wasteful and polluting practice of routine flaring of associated gas from oil wells. 
  • Allow community monitoring data collected from frontline communities and other third parties to assist EPA in the implementation and enforcement of the methane safeguards. 
  • Require monitoring and plugging of abandoned wells that are leaking methane. 

“People of faith and conscience in New Mexico and El Paso Interfaith Power & Light have worked to support strong EPA methane rules for nearly a decade. After countless hearings, faith letters, and public comments we are grateful for the ethical and moral leadership the EPA is taking. Over the years alarm and concern for community health, environmental justice, and caring for our sacred climate have grown and we must continue to act.” said Sister Joan Brown, osf, Executive Director, Interfaith Power & Light New Mexico & El Paso.

When implemented and enforced, these rules will keep the U.S. on track to meet its global promise of reducing methane 30% by 2030 and 80% by 2038!

The climate-heating gas first became a widely known issue in New Mexico in 2014 when NASA satellite images showed the methane hotspot over the Four Corners area of New Mexico.

Peer-reviewed science indicates that living within half-a-mile of oil and gas production facilities is clearly correlated with negative health impacts including cancer, respiratory illness, fetal defects, blood disorders, and neurological problems.

According to those same scientific studies, the health of almost 7 percent of our residents (primarily in southeast New Mexico, but also San Juan County) is threatened by emissions and leaks from oil wells and other facilities.

Kayley Shoup, an organizer with Citizens Caring for the Future, said in a June 2023 interview that every time she hears about a child or teenager in the Permian Basin being diagnosed with a rare cancer or leukemia, she’s made it a point to find out how close they live to oil and gas facilities. She said nine times out of ten, the children are living within close distance to an oil or gas facility.

“I really think that it can’t be understated just how much of a health risk these things pose when they’re close to schools, or they’re close to homes, and that distance really does make a difference in what health impacts folks are dealing with,” she told the New Mexico Political Report.

NM faith leaders monitor emission levels in Permian Basin

New Mexicans Speak Out

Over the past decade or so, thousands of New Mexicans have spoken out in favor of strong methane and ozone rules in the Obama, Trump, and Biden administrations.

“It is the responsibility of each of us to protect the planet with every small action that affects it. This is why I’m grateful for the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) recent steps to regulate methane and other dangerous emissions from oil and gas facilities across the country,” Rev. Nick King, a Mennonite pastor in Carlsbad, NM, said in an opinion piece in the Albuquerque Journal in January of 2022, during the comment period on the proposed rules.

Additionally, Gov. Lujan Grisham’s administration has passed nation-leading methane and ozone safeguards that have provided a strong model for the rules the EPA is releasing. And importantly for families in New Mexico’s Permian Basin, federal protections will apply to extraction in Texas, where methane emissions are nearly unregulated.

“Reducing methane pollution from the oil and gas industry is the fastest, most cost-effective way to slow the rate of climate change and avoid the further escalation of unpredictable, severe, and catastrophic weather events like those we’ve seen in New Mexico including the wildfires and subsequent floods that ravaged the northern part of the state and the heat dome we experienced this summer,” said a press release posted by coalition of environmental and climate justice organizations working on cutting emissions.

“People of faith and conscience, with a shared commitment for stewardship of our Sacred Earth, applaud the EPA for these rules to address harmful methane pollution.  At a time when nations are meeting for the international climate conference in Dubai, the final EPA rules show the U.S. is serious about its moral responsibility to reduce methane pollution. The rules will help address the climate crisis by decreasing methane in our air, and it will help protect the millions of people living on the frontlines of oil and gas development across the country,” said Rev. Susan Hendershot, national IPL President.  Read the national IPL press statement.

EPA Releases Strong Methane Rules in Conjunction with COP28 Summit

Today, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released final rules to cut methane and other harmful pollutants from oil and gas operations throughout the United States. Interfaith Power & Light (IPL) supports the EPA in taking these common-sense steps to reduce methane that was being wasted by the oil & gas industry. 

Rev. Susan Hendershot, IPL President, said, “People of faith and conscience, with a shared commitment for stewardship of our Sacred Earth, applaud the EPA for these rules to address harmful methane pollution.  At a time when nations are about to meet for the international climate conference in Dubai, the final EPA rules show the U.S. is serious about its moral responsibility to reduce methane pollution. The rules will help address the climate crisis by decreasing methane in our air, and it will help protect the millions of people living on the frontlines of oil and gas development across the country.”

Interfaith Power & Light state affiliate leaders are on the frontlines of these issues in places like the Permian Basin region in New Mexico. 

A Statement from Sister Joan Brown, Executive Director of IPL-New Mexico & EL Paso

Sister Joan Brown, osf, Executive Director, New Mexico Interfaith Power & Light, said:People of faith and conscience in New Mexico and El Paso Interfaith Power & Light have been working to support strong EPA methane rules for a decade. We have grown in alarm and concern for community health, environmental justice, and caring for our sacred climate. The EPA holds a particular ethical responsibility to address pollution from the oil and gas industry. Pope Francis recently called the climate path that we are on “madness.”  Strong rules are imperative to care for our neighbors and the Common Good, and we are grateful for this critical EPA rule. Many in our communities suffer not only from climate change effects but also from pollution that causes multiple health problems. People of faith understand that these rules are meant to cherish life, and we look forward to strong enforcement that addresses the irresponsible and wasteful practice of routine flaring in communities throughout the Permian Basin of Southeast New Mexico, where many new immigrants live and in the Northwest part of our state that is home to many Navajo communities.”

Interfaith Power & Light urges the EPA now to move toward implementation and enforcement of the rule. Rapid and effective implementation and enforcement can help us make an immediate difference in the health impacts of those frontline communities on the edge of oil & gas development. It can also make a difference in addressing climate pollution and helping to encourage and inspire other countries to take similar actions.

40 Tips for Christmas from the United Methodist Creation Justice Team

The United Methodist Creation Justice team has put together a list of 40 tips for the Christmas holiday. The recommendations are grouped into four categories. We have included a couple of tips with each category and encourage you to download the full post to see all the tips.

1. Greening Your Gift Giving

When you shop online for gifts, check the “About” portion of the website before you buy. Find out what the company is or is not doing to care for creation and justice. Support those sources that help, not harm. Look for B Corp and other companies that give back 1% for the planet.

Give Fair Trade presents this Christmas. Buying Fair Trade provides the creators—farmers, laborers, and artisans—fair prices and stable incomes, reduces poverty, creates betters working conditions, and promotes environmentally sustainable practices. It’s a just and good deal for all! If you want to give Fair Trade coffee, explore the Velasquez Family Coffee website (vfamilycoffee.com).

Choose earth-friendly gifts that keep giving, for example: a shampoo bar, a package of wooden clothes pins to use instead of plastic “chip clips,” jams or other preserves from local farmers, a roll of bamboo toilet paper from Who Gives a Crap, a bracelet made of plastic recovered from an ocean, a bamboo toothbrush, a packet of seeds for native plants or wildflowers. Sustainable presents spark good conversation.

2. Greening Your Decorating

Go live! Live trees that you can replant are kindest to the environment. A cut tree harvested from an organic tree farm will likely be replaced with two others that will also combat climate change. If you need a smaller tree, consider a potted tree you can enjoy year-round (with or without the decorations). Whatever size you need, check local nurseries. Some are beginning to rent out trees for the holidays.

If you are considering an artificial tree, count the costs to the environment before you buy. Artificial trees are made from a plastic called PVC, which creates hazardous waste and emissions during manufacturing. Most are shipped from China, which increases their carbon footprint much more than real trees. If you already own an artificial tree, use it for at least 10 years. Keep the tree in good condition so that you can pass it on to someone else who will appreciate having it and won’t need to buy one.

3. Greening Your Celebrations

Let’s talk turkey. Avoid food waste, which in landfills becomes methane and exacerbates the climate crisis. Consume less in the first place. Across the globe, near and far, too many people are hungry. Consuming too much and wasting what’s left over aren’t healthy for people or planet. Justice means ensuring enough for all.

Compost the food scraps from preparation and leftovers. If you are not set up to compost easily, check with your guests, a farmer or gardener friend, or your local government for options. Between the time the scraps are made and when they can be taken to a compost site, put them in a container out of the way or in the fridge or freezer, preferably in a compostable bag. Check online for bag options.

Be mindful of water. Too many places are experiencing drought, which endangers food crops, wildlife, and people whose livelihood suffers. Don’t run the faucet while cleaning vegetables. Rinse them instead in a bowl full of clean water. Then use the water on your indoor or outdoor plants. Likewise, when filling your dishwasher, don’t “pre-wash” with running water. A good scraping—preferably into a compost bucket—or just a splash of water is plenty.

4. Greening Your Putting Away

Recycle your Christmas cards. Plain paper Christmas cards can go straight into the paper recycling bin, no questions asked. But shiny cards, ones printed on photo paper, and ones with metallic embossing or glitter are no-no’s. However, look closely—even they may have a half that is free of the contaminants. Cut apart and safely recycle the good side. Before you dispose of the cards, take an extra minute to reread them and give thanks for your friends.

Reuse shiny Christmas bows and ribbons. They do not recycle because they are a composite of plastic and paper and a no-no in the recycling bin. Ribbons are notorious for snagging recycling machinery. So, reuse. Make a game of tossing the bows into a large paper bag to save for another season. When the bow or ribbon is truly dead, you’ll need to trash it.

Here is the link to the full post