
Congress passes resolution in a move toward eliminating the methane fee despite longstanding bipartisan support to reduce methane emissions
WASHINGTON – Today, the Senate voted to pass a joint resolution disapproving of the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) rule to implement the methane waste emissions charge, following the House of Representative’s passage of the same on Wednesday. The resolution now heads to President Trump’s desk where he is expected to sign it.
“We are disappointed in Congress’ vote to undercut implementation of the methane fee, which has long had bipartisan support,” said Reece Rushing, U.S. Federal Policy Director at Clean Air Task Force (CATF). “Methane reduction and mitigation creates high-quality jobs and provides energy security by reducing wasted gas while providing clear public health and climate benefits. The action taken today by Congress puts those benefits at risk.”
“If Congress and the administration want to eliminate waste, today’s action is not how you do that,” said Jonathan Banks, Global Director for Methane Pollution Prevention at CATF. “The oil and gas industry wastes millions of dollars of gas every year that could have gone to heating homes and powering industry, and the waste emissions charge is a tool to tell companies not to waste those energy resources. Attempts to eliminate it are misguided and shortsighted at best. Companies and the world know that times are changing, and the world is moving to a place where globally traded gas is going to have to demonstrate abatement of methane emissions. Actions like this only make it harder for U.S. companies to compete in the global market.”
The waste emissions charge (WEC) is a part of the United States’ world-leading approach to capturing methane from the oil and gas sector. Enacted in the Inflation Reduction Act, the WEC is meant to encourage oil and gas companies to quickly adopt readily available methane mitigation controls and approaches by charging a fee on emissions that exceed industry-aligned thresholds but granting an exemption to operators in compliance with EPA’s world-leading Clean Air Act methane standards, which are predicated on EPA’s 2009 Endangerment Finding.
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Samantha Sadowski, Kommunikationsmanagerin, USA, ssadowski@catf.us, +1 202-440-1717
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Clean Air Task Force (CATF) ist eine globale gemeinnützige Organisation, die sich für den Schutz vor den schlimmsten Auswirkungen des Klimawandels einsetzt, indem sie die rasche Entwicklung und den Einsatz von kohlenstoffarmen Energien und anderen klimaschützenden Technologien vorantreibt. Mit mehr als 25 Jahren international anerkannter Expertise in der Klimapolitik und einem leidenschaftlichen Engagement für die Erforschung aller potenziellen Lösungen ist CATF eine pragmatische, nicht ideologische Interessengruppe mit den mutigen Ideen, die für die Bewältigung des Klimawandels erforderlich sind. CATF hat Büros in Boston, Washington D.C. und Brüssel, mit Mitarbeitern, die virtuell auf der ganzen Welt arbeiten. Besuchen Sie catf.us und folgen Sie @cleanaircatf.