NEWS RELEASE
Groups Target EPA for Failing to Protect Clean Air in Rocky Mountain West from Oil and Gas Driling Sublette County Officially in Violation of Smog Standards: Cost-effective Safeguards at Hand For Immediate Release: July 2, 2008
For More Information Contact: Jeremy Nichols, Director, Rocky Mountain Clean Air Action, (303) 454-3370 Nick Persampieri, Earthjustice, (303) 996-9617 Notice of Intent to File Suit >>
Denver, CO—A
coalition of groups today announced their intent to sue the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency over its nationwide failure to keep
families and communities safe from air pollution produced by oil and
gas drilling.
The Clean Air Act notice of intent to sue was filed with the EPA
Administrator in Washington, D.C., and provides that the groups can
file suit anytime after 60 days.
"Federal clean air safeguards for oil and gas drilling have failed
to keep pace with technology and science, putting our children,
communities, and climate at risk," said Jeremy Nichols, Director of
Rocky Mountain Clean Air Action. "Oil and gas drilling should not come
at the expense of our health and our future generations."
Oil and gas drilling releases a number of harmful air pollutants,
which make the skies smoggier and more toxic to breathe throughout the
United States, and fuel global climate change. Making things worse,
federal clean air standards for oil and gas drilling are outdated and
illegal, endangering public health and the climate.
Under the Clean Air Act, the EPA is required to periodically review
and update clean air regulations. In the case of the oil and gas
industry, the EPA has failed to review and update three sets of clean
air regulations, some of which were last reviewed in 1999 and some as
long ago as 1985.
The result is that a number of operations related to oil and gas
drilling are unregulated, while many others are allowed to spew harmful
air pollution without using the latest technologies to safeguard public
health and the climate.
In the Rocky Mountain States of Colorado, Montana, New Mexico,
Utah, and Wyoming, where oil and gas drilling is booming, the impact of
the EPA's footdragging is staggering.
In Garfield County in
western Colorado near the resort town of Aspen, oil and gas drilling
has increased by more than 132 percent since 2004 and there are now
more than 7,000 wells. Oil and gas operations release 77 percent of
the area's benzene—a known carcinogen—into the air. This increase is
because outdated federal clean air regulations do not apply to oil and
gas wells.
Studies by the Colorado Department o
f Public Health and Environment
show that residents of Garfield County face higher health risks because
of benzene, while a recent risk assessment found that benzene in the
air posed an "unacceptable" cancer risk.
Dee Hoffmeister, a resident of Garfield County, Colorado, is a
victim of the increased air pollution. Four oil and gas wells have
been drilled within 800 feet of her home. In 2005, she passed out
after a cloud of gas appeared outside of her home. She has since become
disabled with chronic weakness, dizziness, nausea, pain, burning skin,
and breathing difficulty. Air samples from her home found benzene and
other toxic air pollutants released by drilling.
"It's unconscionable that outdated federal regulations have allowed
the oil and gas industry to spew benzene and other toxic pollutants
into the air my family and I breathe," said Hoffmeister. "The EPA's
footdragging is abhorrent, we need the strongest, most up-to-date clean
air regulations to keep our families and our communities safe."
In San Juan County in northwestern New Mexico, there are more than
18,000 oil and gas wells. The region is the largest producing natural
gas field in the United States. Many wells in San Juan County produce
hydrogen sulfide, which smells like rotten eggs. At low levels,
hydrogen sulfide can cause difficulty breathing, nausea, and headaches;
at high levels, it can cause loss of consciousness and even death.
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management reports there are more than 375
wells that release hydrogen sulfide in San Juan County. This is due in
part to the fact that federal clean air regulations only limit hydrogen
sulfide emissions from large natural gas processing plants and oil
refineries, but not from individual oil and gas wells.
Shirley McNall, a resident of Aztec in San Juan County, has
experienced hydrogen sulfide pollution firsthand. There are at least
20 wells within three fourths of a mile of her home and a well pad
within 500 feet. For two and a half months in 2005, amid strong
hydrogen sulfide odors, she experienced sore throats, headaches,
dizziness, and muscle weakness.
"Like hydrogen sulfide, the EPA's footdragging stinks," said
McNall. "For our health and our future, clean air regulations for the
oil and gas industry need to be brought into the 21st Century."
Both
women's stories are presented in the report, "Drilling Down: Protecting
Western Communities from the Health and Environmental Effects of Oil
and Gas Production," authored by Natural Resources Defense Council and
Rocky Mountain Clean Air Action. This report is available here >>
Oil and gas drilling also has been linked to rising smog levels in
western Wyoming and metropolitan Denver, haze in pristine wilderness
areas and national parks, and climate change. Drilling releases large
amounts of methane, a greenhouse gas 21 times more potent than carbon
dioxide.
"In the face of booming oil and gas drilling, the Rocky Mountain
west is facing its most significant air quality challenges ever," said
Nick Persampieri, an Earthjustice attorney. "We can't meet these
challenges if we don't have updated clean air safeguards."
Coalition groups include Rocky Mountain Clean Air Action
(Colorado), Powder River Basin Resource Council (Wyoming), San Juan
Citizens Alliance (Colorado and New Mexico), and the Oil and Gas
Accountability Project (Colorado and Montana), along with national
groups the Environmental Integrity Project, and Natural Resources
Defense Council.
Additional Background Information
- In violation of the Clean Air Act, the EPA has failed to review
and update three sets of clean air regulations related to oil and gas
drilling.
- The first regulations are called "New Source Performance
Standards," and ensure that sources of air pollution use the latest
technology to reduce any pollutants that endanger public health and
welfare, such as hydrogen sulfide. Under the Clean Air Act, the EPA
must review and update New Source Performance Standards every eight
years. Standards for oil and gas operations were first promulgated in
1985 and have not been updated since. The 1985 regulations only limit
air pollution from natural gas processing plants, not from oil and gas
wells. They also do not address greenhouse gases or global warming
pollution.
- The second regulations are called "Maximum Achievable Control
Technology" standards, and ensure that industry reduce toxic air
emissions—such as benzene—using the most effective technology
available. Under the Clean Air Act, the EPA must review and update
Maximum Achievable Control Technology standards every eight years.
Standards related to oil and gas operations were first promulgated in
1999 and have not been updated since. The 1999 regulations do not
address toxic air pollution from a number of operations related to oil
and gas drilling.
- The third regulations are called "Residual Risk" standards, and
ensure that industry reduces toxic air emissions to safeguard public
health. Residual Risk standards are typically stronger than Maximum
Achievable Control Technology standards. Under the Clean Air Act, the
EPA must establish Residual Risk standards within eight years of
promulgating Maximum Achievable Control Technology standards. It has
been nine years since standards related to oil and gas drilling were
set. Currently, there are no regulations that explicitly protect
public health from toxic air pollution produced by oil and gas
drilling.
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