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The Ravenswood Generating Station, which uses natural gas, fuel oil and kerosene to power its boilers, is seen in 2015 in Long Island City, N.Y. (CNS photo/Justin Lane, EPA)  

WASHINGTON (CNS) -- Nearly two dozen Catholic entities have joined other investors in urging major oil and natural gas producing companies to oppose the Environmental Protection Agency's proposed rollback of standards governing greenhouse gas emissions.

In an early December letter to the energy firms, the 61 shareholders that are part of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility wrote that any rollback is risky to their investments because it would lead to "excessive methane emissions that needlessly tarnish the reputation of natural gas as clean fuel and call into question the role natural gas can play in a low-carbon future."

In an early December letter to the energy firms, the 61 shareholders that are part of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility wrote that any rollback is risky to their investments.

The letter specifically focuses on an EPA plan to ease the New Source Performance Standards, or NSPS, adopted in 2016. The standards govern production and transmission in the oil and gas industry.

The standards set limits on the emission of methane, volatile organic compounds and hazardous air pollutants in energy production. The EPA proposal seeks to ease those limits, citing cost savings to industry.

Organizations such as Virginia-based Mercy Investment Services, one of the Catholic signatories to the letter, see the rollbacks not just as financially risky but a threat to the environment as the world struggles to respond to climate change.

"It's a loss of product for (the companies)," Mary Minette, director of shareholder advocacy at Mercy Investment Services, said of leaks at wellheads and pipelines. "It's also horrendous for climate change and air quality. Quite frankly, the oil and gas companies need to get control of it if they want to say natural gas is a lower carbon fuel force."

 

The shareholders' concern is that methane is an especially potent greenhouse gas, a class of pollutants that trap heat in the atmosphere. The majority of environmental scientists have pointed to research that shows greenhouse gases are a major contributor to global warming.

President Donald Trump's administration has called for rollbacks of "excessive" environmental regulations, saying they are too costly to industry and would slow the drive to U.S. energy independence. Trump and some members of Congress also have dismissed scientific findings on climate change, saying current global warming is part of a natural cycle that has seen atmospheric temperatures rise and fall over time.

The EPA proposed amendments to the NSPS in September. The comment period on them closes Dec. 17, which hastened the ICCR to act.

The revisions have been sought primarily by smaller oil and natural gas producers who find the regulations too costly to follow.

The amendments affect well construction, natural gas processing plants, storage vessels, and record keeping and reporting. The changes also would reduce the frequency of monitoring of oil and gas infrastructure, including pipelines and compressor stations, for leaks.

The EPA estimated that the amended standards would result in up to an additional 380,000 tons of methane, 100,000 tons of volatile organic compounds and 3,800 tons of hazardous air pollutants being released into the atmosphere at a cost of $13.5 million in foregone climate benefits from 2019 to 2025.

During the same period, the proposals would save industry as much as $380 million in monitoring and construction costs, according to EPA estimates.

During the same period, the proposals would save industry as much as $380 million in monitoring and construction costs, according to EPA estimates.

The EPA said in its report justifying the new standards that the larger amounts of volatile organic compounds in the atmosphere "may also degrade air quality and adversely affect health and welfare effects."

The ICCR shareholders called on the companies to publicly and privately support direct methane regulation by the EPA and oppose elimination of the regulations. They also stressed the need for the energy producers to submit comments to the EPA opposing the rollbacks by the Dec. 17 deadline.

The investors stressed that national emission standards are necessary because of the large number of companies -- more than 600 -- involved in oil and gas production.

"We believe that strong but fair regulations are critical to ensuring the ongoing viability of the oil and gas sector in the energy transition. We would like to hear the companies in our portfolios publicly support a similar position," the shareholders wrote.

The letter pointed to Colorado and California where the current federal regulations to reduce methane leakage have proven effective.

Among the firms receiving the letter were Anadarko Petroleum, ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil and Kinder Morgan. ICCR said the firms were chosen because of their efforts to operate profitably under the stricter standards.

Minette told Catholic News Service Dec. 6 that she had heard from one company wanting to discuss the letter and was expecting to hear from others.

She also said that the shareholders, as part owners of the energy firms, want to be sure they are heard on the issue.

"The companies we wrote to are the ones that are behaving responsibly," she said. "There are a lot of players out there and not everybody is doing the right thing. We want to assure a level playing field and to ensure that everything proper is being done."

Among the letter's signers were the leadership team of the Felician Sisters of North America, Maryknoll Sisters, Sisters of Bon Secours USA, Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia, Corporate Responsibility Office of the Province of St. Joseph of the Capuchin Order, and regional networks of investors including Seventh Generation Interfaith in Milwaukee, Northwest Coalition for Responsible Investment in Seattle and Tri-State Coalition for Responsible Investment in New Jersey.

 

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