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Earth The Courts Government United States Science

Court Blocks EPA Effort To Suspend Obama-Era Methane Rule (pbs.org) 214

Michael Biesecker reports via PBS: A federal appeals court in Washington ruled Monday that the head of the Environmental Protection Agency overstepped his authority in trying to delay implementation of a new rule requiring oil and gas companies to monitor and reduce methane leaks. In a split decision, the three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ordered the EPA to move forward with the Obama-era requirement that aims to reduce planet-warming emissions from oil and gas operations. EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt announced in April that he would delay by 90 days the deadline for oil and gas companies to follow the new rule, so that the agency could reconsider the measure. Last month, Pruitt announced he intended to extend the 90-day stay for two years. In a detailed 31-page ruling, the court disagreed with Pruitt's contention that industry groups had not had sufficient opportunity to comment before the 2016 rule was enacted. The judges also said Pruitt lacked the legal authority to delay the rule from taking effect.
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Court Blocks EPA Effort To Suspend Obama-Era Methane Rule

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 03, 2017 @10:32PM (#54739691)

    Does the EPA go to court try to make the envirnment worse.

    • by nomadic ( 141991 )

      No, they did it a lot in Bush and Reagan Americas too.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 03, 2017 @10:44PM (#54739733)

    Imagine if every government threw out everything agreed by the last government, just to score political points.

    Really Pruitt needs to be more professional here. Country before party.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      That cannot happen in the current administration which has no new bright ideas of their own. They define themselves by being against anything Obama did. This is the brightest idea EPA have will have in this alleged administration.

  • Something about this smells really bad.

    • Methane is odorless. Perhaps you were thinking of hydrogen sulfide?

      • by dbIII ( 701233 )
        As a bit of an aside there's usually a smelly additive introduced before piping it anywhere. Being able to smell gas is a better alternative than detecting it via ignition.
        • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

          boom, boom!

        • Actually it's only odorized before it enters the distribution grid. If it has hydrogen sulfide when it comes out of the ground then you can smell that before it undergoes amine treatment. After treatment it passes for hundred or thousands of miles in transmission pipelines usually non-odorized. It gets odorized upon entering the distribution grid or a storage facility.

  • rule of law (Score:5, Informative)

    by supernova87a ( 532540 ) <kepler1.hotmail@com> on Tuesday July 04, 2017 @12:13AM (#54740093)
    All the commenters here saying, "I don't get why the EPA can be stopped from deciding its own regulations, etc. etc." don't really understand how regulation works, I think.

    When a department of the government issues a regulation, it has to do so with public comment, input, and published reasoning. That, by the way, is an admirable aspect of our country, and why we're not some third world banana republic. People would be thankful for this, I'd think.

    When some new administration comes in, they can't just overturn something willy nilly because they feel like it. They have to go through the same process of showing why the rule should be overturned, delayed, stayed, etc.

    Scott Pruitt of the EPA basically got marching orders from Trump to do anything possible to revoke this rulemaking, and the arguments in court showed how flimsy that was. In order to delay implementation of a regulation (which is tantamount to retracting it, for the amount of time it is delayed), there must be good reason like evidence was ignored, people were not allowed to comment timely, etc.

    None of these was found to be the case, and as a result, the EPA cannot just revoke an order it lawfully issued under the proper process. It can change its mind, but it has to go through the same process.

    We should be thanking the rule of law for saving us from the administration's madness.
  • Methane has a much more powerful greenhouse effect the CO2. This is really bad news.
    • Methane has a much more powerful greenhouse effect the CO2. This is really bad news.

      But, when I've pointed out the massive methane emissions from hydro power lakes, I've had folks here arguing that methane doesn't last long in the atmosphere, therefore is not a significant problem.

      • You're right that there's a possibility for hydro power lake emissions to be significant. The emissions from the O&G industry are just many time larger, which is why they're a primary target.

        There's a similar argument for the livestock/feedlot industry - cows emit a lot of methane. The problem with regulating it is that it's hard to stop. Leaks are a solvable problem with enough investment, stopping cow burps is more complicated...

        In terms of lifetime, CO2 has a much longer lifetime, meaning that even i

        • You're right that there's a possibility for hydro power lake emissions to be significant. The emissions from the O&G industry are just many time larger, which is why they're a primary target.

          Are you certain methane from leaks is many times larger per unit of energy consumed? O&G generates huge amounts of energy, I would think the relative release from leaks is probably pretty low.

          • Good point, per unit energy, I'm not sure.

            If it were to become a significant source of methane (e.g. If it were scaled up so that all energy came from hydro), then the most straightforward way to shut down underwater methane generation is to aerate.

          • Read the regulation: 81 Fed. Reg. 35,824. [gpo.gov] Page 35,838.

            Methane from oil and natural gas leaks is the largest source of methane emission. It accounts for 32% of all anthropogenic methane emission.
            Hydroelectric dams emit only 1.3% of anthropogenic methane emission.

            Regardless of whether they are larger per unit of energy consumed, it is in the collection process that they are released.

        • stopping cow burps is more complicated

          Methane in cows burps depends on the cow's feeding, and it seems methane can be removed by using appropriate seaweed [slashdot.org]. I suspect it will also improve omega 3 / omega 6 balance in the cow's fat, making it more healthy.

          • Agreed, seaweed diets are a possibility. It's pretty early in that research but an interesting option.

            There's also active research into modifying cow gut bacteria to remove the methanogenic capability.

            • There's also active research into modifying cow gut bacteria to remove the methanogenic capability

              This is obviously what the seaweed diet acheive.

              • Possibly, I don't know enough about what the seaweed is doing in the gut to say one way or the other. It could be shutting down the methanogenic bacteria completely, or altering their chemistry, or adding methanotrophic bacteria to offset, or changing the way the cow ruminates, to name a few possibilities. Maybe the mechanism is already known, but I don't know it.

                The research I'm talking about is identifying the methanogenic bacteria and altering it to stay active in the gut, but specifically shut down th

                • Well, that is interesting research, but we do not need it completed to address the problem: reduce cow's methane production. We have the solution through diet, and plenty of time to investigate how it works later.
  • All the comments claiming that the EPA can do whatever it wants whenever it wants, along with all the attacks on the Obama administration, are a prime example showing that Republicans do not care about the law. They do not understand how the law works, how the Congress works, or how the Constitution works. That's what it means to be lawless: not having a clue about legal vs illegal behavior.

    It is beyond irony that the party that claims to support law and order has no idea what these words actually mean. T

  • If Obama can implement rules on a whim, Trump can suspend them just as easily. I'm not arguing if the EPA rules are correct or not. I'm arguing for consistency.

We all agree on the necessity of compromise. We just can't agree on when it's necessary to compromise. -- Larry Wall

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