Testimony on State Methane Rules: Jack Edwards

Members and supporters of New Mexico Interfaith Power & Light have prepared testimony for hearings held by the Environmental Improvement Board. The hearings, held the week of Sept. 20-24, are in support of the The New Mexico Environment Department’s (NMED) strong proposal to cut ozone-forming volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and methane released by the oil and gas industry.
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Lake Powell and lake Mead are currently at one third  of their capacity and close to the point where they can no longer produce hydro electric power. Irrigators on the Sacramento river have for the first time been told to stop diverting water. (1) A pall of smoke hangs over the west. Globally world populations are forced to migrate creating political chaos. Are these things connected?
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I am here to encourage the NMEIB to enact stronger rules to prevent fugitive methane releases. The purpose of this is to prevent the increasingly large  buildup of greenhouse gases and the worsening of the global warning.  I think anyone who is able to connect more than two dots can understand this.
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“The latest August 2021 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) identifies methane as one of the worst greenhouse gases contributing to climate change.” (1)
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One of the more  profound effects of methane releases  is what is  called the “Methane Accelerator”.  As the climate warms many new sources of currently sequestered methane are activated including releases from thawing permafrost and marine hydrates from warming oceans.
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So if methane is such a potent contributor to global warming why not eliminate the controllable releases. As they said in the movie “Show me the money.”
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I will leave you with one more closing thought.  Throughout the southwest one of the most frequently found ancestral puebloan structures are granaries built of tightly mortared stone and mud  and built in high and inaccessible cliffs.  What did they know that we seem to be forgetting.  They knew it is vital to protect their seeds for the future.  Wouldn’t it be nice if we New Mexicans, with our rich cultural backgrounds and our special climate vulnerability, could be a leader in controlling fugitive methane emissions.
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1.) Rinaldo Brutoco, The “Methane Accelerator” Climate Change is Moving Past The Tipping Point, the Montecito Journal, September 21, 2021.
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Jack Edwards
(Retired Civil Engineer)
El Rito, N.M.

Join us Online for NM-IPL Annual Meeting

Acting for Sister Water: A Soul Emergency

Thursday, Nov. 4, 6:30 pm

The climate crisis is a soul crisis and sister water is at the heart of our work. She has wisdom to share and lessons to teach. Our event begins with a Hopi water blessing and reflection with Terry Sloan.

We are pleased to have a wonderful panel

  • Laura Paskus, environmental journalist and author of Precipice, and
  • Sandra Postel, director of the Global Water Policy Project and author of Replenish: The Virtuous Cycle of Water and Prosperity
  • Moderated by Arcie Chapa at the Center for Regional Studies at UNM.

We will celebrate SEED and SPROUT Awardees who have done important work to address climate this past year. Donations accepted.

More details to come. Hold the date. Invite friends and family, everyone young and old.

Via zoom: Registration to carlos@nm-ipl.org and livestreamed on Facebook. Recording will be available after the event on You Tube.

Testimony on State Methane Rules: Marlene Perrotte

Members and supporters of New Mexico Interfaith Power & Light have prepared testimony for hearings held by the Environmental Improvement Board. The hearings, held the week of Sept. 20-24, are in support of the The New Mexico Environment Department’s (NMED) strong proposal to cut ozone-forming volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and methane released by the oil and gas industry. Here are the comments from Marlene Perotte, a Sister of Mercy and member of New Mexico Interfaith Power & Light

Dear Members of the Environmental Improvement Board, 

I am _Marlene Perrotte, a Sister of Mercy and member of NM Interfaith Power and Light. I am writing today to encourage the EIB to vote to support and strengthen the New Mexico Environment Department’s draft rule to address Ozone Precursor Pollutants from oil and gas operations. These are ethical issues that demands protection of the Common Good.

  • Oil and gas operations also release hazardous air pollutants such as benzene that is proven to cause cancer, putting those living closest to oil and gas operations at the greatest risk. More than 130,000 New Mexicans live within a half-mile of oil and gas development.
  • New Mexico is home to some of the worst methane pollution in the county. New Mexico is home to two energy-producing regions that are among the nation’s most-polluted. Eddy, Lea, San Juan, Rio Arriba and Chavez Counties – the five New Mexico counties home to 97 percent of the state’s oil and gas wells – are all at risk of violating federal ozone standards of 70 parts per billion. 
  • More methane pollution means accelerated climate change and an uncertain future for New Mexico’s children. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas 84 times more powerful than carbon dioxide in the near term. In fact, methane pollution contributes to about 25 percent of the global warming we are experiencing today.

This rule is critical for protecting both our health and climate by reducing smog-forming volatile organic compounds as well as methane – a powerful greenhouse gas responsible for 25 percent of the climate change we are experiencing today. 

While the Environment Department has put forward a strong proposal, more work needs to be done to protect communities and address major pollution sources to meet Gov. Lujan Grisham’s goal of nation-leading rules to cut pollution. It is critical to include adequate funding for inspection, implementation of violations corrections and fines.

Please adopt a strong final rule that protects communities and addresses major sources of air and climate pollution.

Thank you,

Sr. Marlene Perrotte