Starting in May, new regulations begin to go into effect in Colorado to cap methane emissions from oil and gas drilling sites. These regulations could prove to be a model for the rest of the country.
The measures are also groundbreaking because of the rare collaboration between industry, environmentalists and state leaders which led to the rules.
The crackdown focuses on so-called 鈥渇ugitive emissions鈥� from the storage tanks on oil and gas sites. These emissions consist of methane and a bunch of other baddies known as 鈥渧olatile organic compounds鈥� (VOCs) which can lead to the formation of ozone. A has found that ozone levels in parts of Colorado were far higher than anticipated.
鈥淸It鈥檚] as simple as tightening a valve or replacing a part, I mean these are not complicated fixes,鈥� says Doug Hock, a spokesman for , one of the oil and gas companies that helped craft the new methane regs.
Proponents say the rules are good for the environment and they say the companies stand to profit from selling the gases they capture, making back the money they spent fixing the leaks. Many are calling that a win-win, but economist Alan Krupnick is not so sure.
鈥淚f it鈥檚 so profitable to do that, to capture this methane, why aren鈥檛 the companies doing it now,鈥� says economist Alan Krupnick, a senior fellow at the nonpartisan think tank .
鈥淭hey鈥檙e doing this to improve their image,鈥� Krupnick says of the industry.
The state of Colorado is also on board. Will Allison, the head of Colorado鈥檚 Air Pollution Division, calls the implementation of the new regulations significant, in part, because of what he describes as the intense approach leading up to this point.
鈥淸There were] five days of hearings, back-to-back-to-back in front of our air quality control commission,鈥� says Allison of a process that consisted of meetings, drafts, and compromises that stretched on for more than a year.
In November 2013, though, they reached consensus. Oil and gas companies have to fix leaks and capture 95 percent of emissions. The rules gradually take effect over the next couple of years.