24 个州的总检察长要求最高法院阻止 EPA 的甲烷减排规定
Attorneys General Of 24 States Ask Supreme Court To Block EPA's Methane Reduction Rule

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/attorneys-general-24-states-ask-supreme-court-block-epas-methane-reduction-rule

美国二十四个州已请求最高法院停止实施由环境保护局(EPA)颁布的石油和天然气行业甲烷排放控制法规。 各州认为这些法规超出了美国环保局的权限,因为它们规定了具体的技术措施,而不仅仅是设定排放限值。 俄克拉荷马州、阿拉巴马州、佛罗里达州、印第安纳州、路易斯安那州和弗吉尼亚州总检察长带头呼吁暂停执行今年生效的新规定。 他们声称,要求各州在两年内制定详细计划以减少现有来源的甲烷排放量,由于受影响的石油和天然气站点数量庞大且种类繁多,可能会造成重大经济损失和效率低下。 此外,他们担心这些规则可能会削弱各州独立管理现有设施甲烷和挥发性有机化合物(VOC)排放的能力,从而破坏联邦法律(尤其是《清洁空气法》)的协作性质。 尽管被下级法院驳回,各州现已向最高法院提出论点。 美国环保署声称,石油和天然气活动产生了美国大部分甲烷污染,并将甲烷视为一种强效温室气体。 通过实施这些新法规,美国环保署旨在减少新建和现有石油和天然气设施的甲烷排放,最终避免数百万吨有毒气体的排放。 该法规要求逐步淘汰新钻油井的常规天然气燃烧,并减少过程控制和泵的挥发性有机化合物排放。 然而,各州认为,提交计划的时间过短会导致计划不完整和不充分,从而造成额外的工作量和资源消耗。 最终,各州寻求保留自主权,以便在需要时对甲烷和挥发性有机化合物排放实施更严格的监管。

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原文

Authored by Katabella Roberts via The Epoch Times,

Attorneys General in 24 states have asked the Supreme Court to block the federal government’s methane standards for the oil and gas sector, arguing the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) overstepped its authority in issuing the final rule.

The EPA has said the new standards are part of efforts to sharply reduce emissions of methane and “other harmful air pollution from oil and natural gas operations.”

Led by the state of Oklahoma, attorneys general from states including Alabama, Florida, Indiana, Louisiana, and Virginia filed an emergency appeal to prevent the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from enforcing the rule that went into effect this year.

In their Aug. 27 filing, the states argued that while the federal government has the authority to set emissions limits, the rule outlines specific technologies, processes, and methods that the agency believes states must employ to achieve certain emission-reduction targets, among other requirements. The “EPA did not limit itself to its statutory role for existing sources and then leave it to the States to adopt appropriate standards of performance,” they said.

Furthermore the “rule’s ‘presumptive standards’ are onerous, imposing costs on the oil and gas industries that will—as even EPA admits—inevitably be passed onto consumers across the country,” the states wrote.

The EPA’s rule gives states, along with tribes that wish to regulate existing sources, two years to develop and submit their plans for reducing methane from existing sources.

The rule is aimed at reducing “methane and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from new, modified, and reconstructed sources” and includes emissions guidelines for states to follow as they develop plans to limit methane emissions from existing sources, according to the agency.

The standards include a two-year phase-in period for eliminating routine flaring of natural gas from new oil wells and a one-year phase-in of zero-emissions standards for new process controllers and pumps outside of Alaska.

In the filing, the attorneys general said the agency “understood that, for many States, designing such plans from scratch in a two-year period would be impossible, given the sheer number and diversity of wells involved.”

“States need more than two years to complete this daunting regulatory task, otherwise they risk ’submittal of an inadequately prepared plan that EPA would have to review and reject, leading to unnecessary use of already limited resources.'”

The attorneys general argued that enforcing the rule would also limit the authority of states to establish their own standards for regulating methane and VOC emissions from existing facilities.

“That harms the public interest in the cooperative-federalism regime in the Clean Air Act, generally, and Section 111(d), specifically,” the states argued.

According to the EPA, oil and natural gas operations are the largest industrial source of methane pollution in the United States, and describe methane is a “super pollutant.”

Reducing methane emissions is a “crucial addition to cutting carbon dioxide in slowing the rate of warming of Earth’s atmosphere,” the agency has said.

The EPA’s rules will cut methane emissions from oil and gas operations by nearly 80 percent through 2038 and avoid 16 million tons of smog-forming VOC emissions and 590,000 tons of air toxics, according to the agency.

Additionally, the agency estimates the rules will result in “net climate and ozone health benefits” of $97 to $98 billion dollars from 2024-2038, or the equivalent of $7.3 to $7.6 billion a year, after accounting for the costs of compliance and savings from recovered natural gas.

An appeals court in Washington in July denied a request by the states to put the new methane regulations on hold while their legal challenge plays out in court, prompting them to ask the nation’s highest court.

The Epoch Times has contacted an EPA spokesperson for comment.

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