EPA
Issues Final GHG Reporting Rule for Oil and Gas
Industry
On November 8, 2010, the
United States Environmental Protection Agency
("EPA") finalized reporting requirements for the
petroleum and natural gas industry sector under
its Mandatory Greenhouse Gas ("GHG") Reporting
Rule, which are located in Subpart W of 40
C.F.R. Part 98 ("Subpart W"). Subpart W imposes
substantial new obligations relating to the
monitoring, calculation and reporting of GHG
emissions by covered members of the industry,
often from emissions sources that historically
never have been subject to federal air
regulations. The applicability threshold,
specialized definitions and lack of a de minimis
exemption in Subpart W ensure far-ranging
practical and financial impacts for the
industry, including small onshore producers and
operators of marginal wells.
The final rule
applies to onshore petroleum natural gas
production facilities, onshore natural gas
processing plants and onshore natural gas
transmission compression facilities, as well as
to the following industry segments: offshore
petroleum and natural gas production,
underground natural gas storage, liquefied
natural gas ("LNG") storage, LNG import and
export, and natural gas distribution. Under the
rule, facilities emitting 25,000 or more metric
tons per year of carbon dioxide equivalent
("CO2e") must calculate and report their GHG
emissions from specified emissions sources.
Because the GHG of primary concern for the oil
and gas industry is methane, however, this
applicability threshold will be considerably
lower than 25,000 tons because methane has a
global warming potential 21x greater than carbon
dioxide (i.e., one ton of methane is equivalent
to 21 CO2e).
Perhaps most
significantly, the final rule retains the
basin-wide definition of "facility" for the
onshore production segment that was contained in
the proposed rule, which many industry sources
challenged as fundamentally unworkable.
Specifically, a single onshore production
"facility" is defined to include all petroleum
or natural gas equipment on a well pad or
associated with a well pad and CO2 enhanced oil
recovery operations that are under common
ownership or control and that are located in a
single hydrocarbon basin as defined by the
American Association of Petroleum Geologists
("AAPG").* Because the reporting entity
for purposes of onshore production is the entity
holding the state drilling permit, where a
permit holder operates more than one well in a
particular basin, all wells and their associated
equipment would be considered a single
"facility," and the GHG emissions associated
with those wells must be aggregated to determine
the applicability of the rule. Taken together,
these definitions mean that a particular company
will only have one onshore production "facility"
per basin, regardless of the number,
interconnectedness or proximity of the wells
involved. Compounding this issue, many of these
AAPG basins are very large and cover several
states-- West Virginia, for example, is divided
into two basins that extend beyond the State's
borders to encompass much of the Appalachian
region. Obviously, the likelihood of surpassing
the 25,000 CO2e applicability threshold will
increase with the size of the relevant basin.
Due to the varied number of specific emissions
sources at individual well pads, GHG emissions
from well pads will be highly variable and
difficult to generalize;** however,
operators of numerous wells within a single
basin, particularly wells with large production
volumes and significant associated equipment,
should evaluate carefully the potential
applicability of the rule.
With regard to
specific requirements, Subpart W requires
covered facilities to report carbon dioxide
(CO2) and methane (CH4) from equipment leaks and
venting, and CO2, CH4 and nitrous oxide (N2O)
emissions from gas flares and combustion
sources. Calculation methodologies generally
include the use of engineering estimates,
emissions modeling software and emissions
factors, though direct measurement is still
required for certain emissions sources when
other methods are not feasible. Consistent with
previously finalized GHG reporting rules for
other industry sectors, reporters meeting
specific criteria may use best available
monitoring methods for certain emissions sources
for a limited period during the 2011 reporting
year, rather than the methodologies specified in
the final rule. Approved "best available"
methods include monitoring methods currently in
use by the facility that do not meet Subpart W's
specifications, supplier data, engineering
calculations or other company records.
EPA has estimated
that implementation of Subpart W by the industry
will cost an average of $16,000 per facility in
the first year and $7,000 per facility annually
thereafter. Various members of the industry,
however, have rejected EPA's cost estimate as
drastically understating-according to some
analyses, by at least two orders of
magnitude-the financial burden that compliance
with the rule will place on individual oil and
gas companies, and particularly smaller
businesses. The result, according to industry
organizations, is a significantly disparate
impact on the oil and gas industry vis-à-vis
other industry sectors subject to reporting
obligations under other sections of EPA's
mandatory GHG reporting program.
EPA's issuance of
Subpart W so late in 2010 has left very little
time for facilities subject to the rule to make
their initial applicability determinations and
undertake whatever preparatory steps are
necessary before it becomes effective. Covered
sources are required to begin data collection on
January 1, 2011, with the first annual report to
be submitted on March 31, 2012, for calendar
year 2011 emissions. Companies potentially
affected by the final rule are encouraged to
take quick action to make a formal determination
regarding Subpart W's applicability before the
rule's requirements take effect. EPA plans to
develop voluntary screening tools for the
industry to assist potential reporters in
determining the applicability of Subpart W,
which the agency anticipates will be based on
easily determined inputs such as major equipment
or operational counts. Generally, these
applicability tools would only serve as a guide
to identify those facilities that are clearly
well below or well above the reporting
threshold, while those facilities that are close
to the threshold and will need to collect
further information to confirm whether they fall
within the scope of Subpart W.
Additional
information regarding Subpart W is available at
EPA's website. We will be happy to
assist in interpreting the requirements of this
important new rule.
*In an important clarification
actively sought by industry, EPA has emphasized
that this definition of "facility" for onshore
production facilities is limited to Subpart W
and does not impact other EPA air regulations.
Nevertheless, this definition may set a
troubling precedent regarding the legitimacy and
viability of aggregating emissions from multiple
wells in future air-related regulatory
efforts.
**In EPA's analysis of average
emissions associated with individual well pads,
emissions ranged from 370 metric tpy CO2e (so
that approximately 68 wells equals 25,000 metric
tpy CO2e) to approximately 4927 metric tpy CO2e
(so that approximately five wells equals 25,000
metric tpy CO2e). EPA, Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Reporting from the Petroleum and Natural Gas
Industry: Background Technical Support Document,
p. 31. Some very low-producing wells may
have annual emissions that fall below EPA's
low-end estimate.
A version of this article was
printed in the December 2010 edition of
IOGA News, a publication of The
Independent Oil and Gas Association of West
Virginia,
Inc. |