FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
Kathleen
Sutcliffe, Earthjustice, (202) 384-7157
Jason Pitt,
Sierra Club (202) 675-6272
Lori Sinsley,
Environmental Defense Fund, (415) 293-6097
Stuart Ross,
Clean Air Task Force, (914) 649-5037
WASHINGTON, DC – More than 156,000 concerned
citizens and 33 environmental and public health groups filed public comments with
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency over the past four months, pressing
for strong updated, air pollution protections from oil and gas drilling. Environmental groups submitted technical
comments to the EPA highlighting the strengths of the agency’s proposed rule
and explaining how it could be improved. The comment period ends today.
“When the air in Wyoming gets smoggier than the air in Los Angeles,
something has gone wrong.
Thanks to lax air regulations on the oil and gas industry, that’s exactly
what’s happened,” said Earthjustice attorney Robin Cooley. “As demonstrated by
the impressive volume of public comments on EPA’s proposed protections from oil
and gas industry air pollution, the American public is eager to clean our air
of lung-burning, cancer-causing pollutants.”
The country is in the midst of a gas
rush, spurred on by a controversial technology know as hydraulic fracturing or
fracking, in which drillers blast millions of gallons of chemically laced water
into the ground to crack shale rock and force out gas.
“Over
the past several months, thousands of families stood up to the dirty gas
industry and asked the EPA to fight for clean air,” said Deb Nardone, Director
of Sierra Club's Natural Gas Reform Campaign. “This industry is growing at an
incredible rate and the weak air safeguards now in place do not protect
the health of our communities from industry practices like hydraulic
fracturing. We urge the agency to adopt these standards without delay and
strengthen them to include overlooked pollutants and pollution sources.”
Fumes from natural gas and oil wells dump
smog-forming pollutants and cancer-causing benzene into the air. In the drilling-rig-studded
Upper Green River Basin of Wyoming, levels of pollution-forming ozone reached
123 parts per billion earlier this year -- worse than air quality in traffic-intensive
Los Angeles.
“Shale gas production has gone from a negligible
amount just a few years ago to being almost 30% of total U.S. natural gas
production but national clean air standards
covering these activities have not been updated since 1985 in one case and 1999
in another. They are limited, inadequate, and out of date, particularly given
recent technological advances in this area, said Susanne
Brooks, senior economic policy
analyst at EDF. “This poses a serious problem, since exploration and production
activities emit numerous hazardous air pollutants and other airborne
contaminants that threaten human health and the environment. Communities across
the country are paying the price, suffering from air pollution in the absence
of protective, comprehensive standards.”
David McCabe, Atmospheric Scientist
with Clean Air Task Force, pointed out that while the proposed regulation of
several air pollutants will help
protect our nation's public health, the
regulations to cut smog-forming pollutants need to be tightened further, and
the regulations fail to directly regulate the release of methane
into the atmosphere. “Natural gas operations emit more methane -- a highly
potent climate pollutant -- than any other industry in the nation,” said
McCabe. “In our technical comments to EPA we have made a strong case for
amending the draft rule to clean up
wasteful and dangerous emissions
of methane from operations of the oil and gas industries.”
The public comment period on a draft
rule published in August ended today. The agency is under a court order to
finalize the rule by April 3, 2012.
Because the agency failed to update
air pollution standards for drilling, Earthjustice filed suit on behalf of
WildEarth Guardians and the San Juan Citizens Alliance—two American West-based
environmental organizations based in the American West.
An abbreviated version of the
technical comments can be found here: http://earthjustice.org/sites/default/files/NSPSshortcomments.pdf.
A full copy of the technical comments will
be available upon request.
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