BP And Shell Take A Stand Against Gas Flaring In Texas
reported, citing a joint letter by the supermajors.” data-reactid=”12″>BP and Shell have urged Texas energy regulators to put a stop to routine gas flaring across the state’s oil fields, Bloomberg reported, citing a joint letter by the supermajors.
“We believe there is a real opportunity for the state to set the bar for others to follow,” the two Big Oil majors wrote. “We encourage the Railroad Commission of Texas to support an ambition of zero routine flaring in Texas.”
call to end flaring, made by investors managing more than $2 trillion in assets, on the Texas Railroad Commission earlier this week. The group urged the regulators to end flaring for good by 2025.” data-reactid=”14″>The move comes on the heels of another call to end flaring, made by investors managing more than $2 trillion in assets, on the Texas Railroad Commission earlier this week. The group urged the regulators to end flaring for good by 2025.
“Actions of leading operators demonstrate the financial and technical viability of ending routine flaring,” the investor group, including Alliance Bernstein and Legal & General Investment Management, said. “It is clear, however, that voluntary actions alone have been insufficient to eliminate routine flaring industry-wide.”
Flaring, the practice of burning excess natural gas is rampant across the world, especially in large oil producers such as Russia and Iraq. Yet flaring is also common in U.S. fields. Last year, flaring hit a record in the Permian, not least because of a shortage of pipeline capacity that could have accommodated the natural gas released during oil production.
150 billion cubic meters of natural gas every year. Last year, this rose to 250 billion cu m. What’s more, sometimes flares malfunction, releasing unburned methane—a much more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide—into the atmosphere.” data-reactid=”21″>The problem is global: the oil and gas industry flares some 150 billion cubic meters of natural gas every year. Last year, this rose to 250 billion cu m. What’s more, sometimes flares malfunction, releasing unburned methane—a much more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide—into the atmosphere.
approved changes to the regulatory framework around the practice that aims to reduce the amount of gas burned at oil fields. Based on the two letters from investors and Shell and BP, however, it needs to do more.
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com” data-reactid=”22″>In the U.S. shale patch, flaring fell significantly when oil production dropped amid the oil price crash this year. Yet the moment production picks up, so does flaring. The Texas Railroad Commission, which has been generous with flaring permits, recently approved changes to the regulatory framework around the practice that aims to reduce the amount of gas burned at oil fields. Based on the two letters from investors and Shell and BP, however, it needs to do more.
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com
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