Community Corner
Gov. Polis Orders Colorado Regulators To Crack Down On Air Pollution From Oil And Gas Industry
Polis ordered regulators to enact rules to achieve a 30% cut in ozone precursors from oil and gas operations by 2025, and a 50% cut by 2030.
March 16, 2023
After decades of failure to meet health standards under the Clean Air Act, Colorado leaders on Thursday signaled their intent to take a more aggressive approach to cutting ozone pollution from the oil and gas industry as work begins on a new set of federally mandated regulatory plans.
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In a letter to agency heads, Gov. Jared Polis ordered regulators to enact rules that will achieve a 30% cut in so-called ozone precursors from oil and gas operations by 2025, and a 50% cut by 2030.
βDespite passing meaningful and effective legislation to reduce emissions from oil and gas operations, this sector still has a significant impact on our stateβs air quality and greenhouse gas emissions,β Polis wrote. βPut simply, just as we need to do more in transportation and other sectors, we need to do more to reduce emissions from oil and gas operations in Colorado.β
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The move comes as Colorado expects to receive another failing grade from the Environmental Protection Agency for its mandatory βstate implementation planβ to address ground-level ozone, an airborne pollutant that can cause a variety of health problems. For decades, a nine-county region centered on the north Denver metro area has been out of compliance with federal air-quality standards for ozone, which is formed by a chemical reaction between sunlight and precursors pollutants like nitrogen oxides.
While a large percentage of Coloradoβs ozone problem is attributable to natural and βbackgroundβ precursors that originate from other states and even overseas, oil and gas operations are the largest single local contributor, with gas-powered vehicles and lawn equipment also significant sources.
In a statement, Lynn Granger, Midwest and Mountain West director for the American Petroleum Institute, said Coloradoβs oil and gas industry was βfrustrated by the processβ in which Polis rolled out his targets.
βThe directives issued by Gov. Polis today are aggressive and highly ambitious, and will necessitate an all-hands approach from regulators, industry and stakeholders,β Granger said. βWe believe the stateβs efforts to combat this issue are genuine, but they must be economy-wide in scale to ultimately succeed. Nevertheless, our industry will continue to be part of the solution and rise to the challenge, as we always do, utilizing technology and innovation to help achieve these targets.β
Colorado lawmakers enacted a sweeping overhaul of state oil and gas laws in 2019 and have invested tens of millions of dollars in clean-air programs over the last several years. But the stateβs latest figures showed peak summertime ozone pollution at levels near 80 parts per billion, exceeding both the 75 ppb EPA standard set in 2008 and a stricter 70 ppb threshold approved in 2015.
Polisβ latest order specifically targets the emissions of nitrogen oxides, or NOx, in what the governorβs letter calls βthe most ambitious rule in Coloradoβs history to reduce harmful air pollution from the oil and gas sector and the first comprehensive NOx reduction program for the oil and gas industry in the United States.β It directs the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission and the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment to enact rules requiring βverifiable and reportableβ emissions cuts by the end of 2024.
In a statement released by Polisβ office, his predecessor, U.S. Sen. John Hickenlooper, said the move will βkeep Colorado the national leader in combating pollution.β Under Hickenlooper, Colorado regulators in 2014 enacted rules aimed at limiting methane emissions that have been hailed as a national model for reducing βupstreamβ pollution in the oil and gas industry.
βColorado led the country on fighting methane emissions, and now it will lead on lowering NOx emissions,β Hickenlooper said. βLimiting NOx emissions cleans up our air and improves public health β especially for kids and Coloradans with asthma.β
Environmental groups also hailed Thursdayβs announcement.
βNo single solution will bring ozone pollution in our region down below unsafe levels, but we clearly need to address emissions from the oil and gas sector in order to get there since it is the largest source of ozone-forming NOx in the region,β said Kirsten Schatz, a clean air advocate with the Colorado Public Interest Research Group. βAfter years of missing the mark on clean air, these directives will help ensure our ozone reduction planning process will actually reduce harmful air pollution.β
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