NMIPL IN THE NEWS

Methane Comments: David Robertson

(The EPA is hosting three virtual public hearings on January 10-12. These hearings are an important opportunity for communities across the country to make their voices heard, and demand that EPA adopts strong, comprehensive methane safeguards to protect our health and our planet. We share ccomments from New Mexico and El Paso residents).

My name is David Robertson. I live in Albuquerque, New Mexico. I am a retired professional engineer. I spent 35 years working on energy efficiency as a research engineer and a facilities engineer. 

There are many reasons to implement strong federal methane safeguards. I have personal reasons that we need these safeguards. I am concerned for myself, my friends, my family, and future generations as we suffer the effects of oil and gas production and climate change. My son and his family – which includes 3 young children – live in West Texas in the Permian basin – a large  oil and natural gas producing area. The region has produced large quantities of methane and VOCs over the years, which contribute to climate change and poor air quality. I am concerned for the health of my son and his family. Families living close to oil and gas who suffer from terrible health conditions. They experience, first hand, growing concerns of health, quality of life, environmental pollution and deterioration of air quality. I have friends in California who just this week had to evacuate to escape flooding and mudslides. I have family and friends on the East Coast who are impacted by sea level rise. We in the Southwest United States are experiencing extreme drought. Immigrants are at our borders escaping the effects of climate change. The damage from climate change to life on the planet is all around us. 

I am concerned for myself, my friends, my family, and future generations as we suffer the effects of oil and gas production and climate change. My son and his family – which includes 3 young children – live in West Texas in the Permian basin – a large  oil and natural gas producing area. The region has produced large quantities of methane and VOCs over the years, which contribute to climate change and poor air quality.

I am a member of the First Unitarian Church of Albuquerque and New Mexico Interfaith Power and light. The people of faith of New Mexico Interfaith Power and Light have worked with the EPA on creating strong methane rules since the beginning of this process. We are working hard for the Common Good. We count on the EPA to work in good faith with us. We need to act quickly for strong rules. This ethical and moral work is not optional, it is the demand of loving service. 

I am a strong advocate for care of creation and protection of this wonderful world we have been blessed with. The mission of the Environmental Protection Agency is to protect the environment. That includes plants, animals, and people. It is life on this planet that I am most concerned about. We have a spiritual, ethical and moral duty to love and care for our neighbor and creation. 

Oil and gas companies are wasting about $2 billion a year worth of natural gas through venting, flaring, and leaks. At a time when Americans are struggling to pay home heating bills, it is unconscionable that oil companies are literally burning natural gas into the air – a practice that is wasteful and harmful to health. 

Commonsense fixes to reduce methane emissions can be done for little cost. Oil and gas companies seeing record profits could deploy these fixes to reduce methane emissions for pennies on the dollar.

Corporate greed is driving energy prices.

While American families struggle at the pump and communities suffer from the impacts of climate change, Big Oil CEOs are raking in record profits – more than $210 billion in the first six months of 2022. Instead of reducing prices, Big Oil is lining their pockets.

Through methane protections we can create good-paying jobs, lower families’ energy costs, and reduce pollution. Reducing methane emissions is the fastest, easiest and cheapest thing we can do to immediately slow the pace of climate change. Methane pollution has more than 80 times the warming power of carbon dioxide over its first 20 years in the atmosphere. Cutting methane pollution from the oil and gas industry is the quickest, most cost-effective way to slow the rate of climate change and protect communities across the country. 

Every day that passes without strong federal methane safeguards in place is a missed opportunity to reduce climate and air pollution from the oil and gas industry, protect the health and wellbeing of communities across this country, and put hundreds of thousands of Americans to work building a more efficient and secure energy system. We cannot continue to wait.

We must act now to stop the worst harm. It is urgent that we implement, strengthen, and finalize these rules and make sure there is industry oversight once they are in place.

I urge you to take all possible measures to put in place strong federal safeguards to reduce methane emissions. 

Thank you for the opportunity to make a public comment on this issue. 

Methane Comments: Arcelia Isais-Gastelum

(The EPA is hosting three virtual public hearings on January 10-12. These hearings are an important opportunity for communities across the country to make their voices heard, and demand that EPA adopts strong, comprehensive methane safeguards to protect our health and our planet. We share ccomments from New Mexico and El Paso residents).

My name is Arcelia Isais-Gastelum. I am a resident of Albuquerque and a person of faith and conscious. Thank you for the opportunity to speak on the federal methane rules.

Throughout my relatively short educational and professional career, I have dedicated my life toward moving us toward a sustainable future. In these ten years, I have operated under the faith and determination that as the technology gets better and the science becomes clearer, we would collectively move toward this path naturally. What instead I’ve seen over and over again is a resistance towards doing even the bare minimum.

Stopping pollution is a crucial first step we must take for protecting our communities. From a moral, physical, and spiritual standpoint, we can no longer afford to keep sacrificing the health of our people for short term economic gain.

New Mexico has some of the worst methane pollution in the country. In addition to causing a quarter of the global warming we are experiencing, methane operations also release compounds into our air that cause respiratory diseases and increase risks of cancer.

Stopping pollution is a crucial first step we must take for protecting our communities. From a moral, physical, and spiritual standpoint, we can no longer afford to keep sacrificing the health of our people for short term economic gain.

This country has repeatedly empowered industries who routinely put our children at risk. It’s become so normalized and expected, there’s now an entire generation of kids who, like me, are growing up and realizing they are beholden to a system that agreed to put their future at stake so previous generations could turn a profit.

It is for these reasons that I strongly support doing the bare minimum of strengthening our federal methane regulations. I say this is the bare minimum because we are not asking to shut down all operations nor to ban all toxic emissions, but simply to regularly inspect these operations and lower the emissions to safer levels.

Thank you again for your time.

Methane Comments: Marlene Perrotte

(The EPA is hosting three virtual public hearings on January 10-12. These hearings are an important opportunity for communities across the country to make their voices heard, and demand that EPA adopts strong, comprehensive methane safeguards to protect our health and our planet. We share ccomments from New Mexico and El Paso residents).

I am Marlene Perrotte, a member of Sister of Mercy whose ethical commitment to Care for Our Common Home and protect the Commonwealth for the Common Good impels us to work more effectively toward the sustainability of life. I come before you because I care about the fate of our planet’s climate, our public health and the viability of the earth’s community. This work is not optional, it is integral to people of faith.

I would like to thank the EPA and each of you for your work on the methane supplemental rule proposal. Strong federal methane safeguards contribute to reducing climate and air pollution from the oil and gas industry, protect the health and wellbeing of communities across this country, and put hundreds of thousands of Americans to work building a more efficient and secure energy system.

Requiring companies to plug leaks and set reasonable limits on venting and flaring of natural gas is essential. EPA’s current proposal would allow smaller wells with leak-prone equipment to forgo regular monitoring, despite the fact that the science is clear about the outsized levels of pollution from these wells. This is a big problem since operators wouldn’t be required to factor in major pollution events called super-emitters or equipment failures

Strong federal methane safeguards contribute to reducing climate and air pollution from the oil and gas industry, protect the health and wellbeing of communities across this country, and put hundreds of thousands of Americans to work building a more efficient and secure energy system.

A study published in the Journal Nature Communications reveals that low-producing oil and gas wells are responsible for approximately half of the methane emitted from all well sites in the United ‘states while accounting for only 6 of the nation’s oil and gas production. Nearly 8 million people across the country live within half a mile of these sites. Taking action in addressing these emissions must be an essential part of a comprehensive effort to modernize U.S. Policy and more energy development in the 21st century.

Thank you for engaging in this ethical endeavor. Thank you for giving us hope as you carry out the EPA’s mission…public servants protecting the Common Wealth for the Common Good, Care of our ‘Common Home.

 

Carlsbad Current Argus. Sep. 3, 2020 New Mexico finalizes oil and gas wastewater regulations, lawmakers hear testimony (Rev. Nick King Quoted)

Las Cruces Sun-News,  Aug. 19, 2020, Report on solving climate crisis brings hope (Co-authored by Michael Sells, Clara Sims and Edith Yanez)

Santa Fe New Mexican, Aug. 15, 2020 Vote your values this November  (Commentary by Larry Rasmussen and Tabitha Arnold)