Oil industry claims reduced emissions; critics disagree

Apr. 24—These two things are indisputable: Greenhouse gases are warming the planet, and the fossil fuel industry is a large source of these emissions.

An industry representative, speaking Friday at a Santa Fe energy summit, didn't deny either, but he said oil and gas operations are growing cleaner and more climate-friendly and will be the mainstay in the coming decades while renewables remain in a supporting role.

Fossil fuel not only powers transportation, generates electricity and heats homes, but is integral to most household products, making it an irreplaceable part of modern life, said Todd Staples, CEO of the Texas Oil & Gas Association, during the summit at La Fonda on the Plaza hosted by the U.S. Hispano Chamber of Commerce.

Staples said stable, affordable energy and good environmental practices don't have to be mutually exclusive.

The best path to greener fossil fuel energy is to produce more domestically, Staples said, because the U.S. has more stringent oversight than most of the world, as seen by America's reduction in collective carbon emissions in recent years.

"If you want to achieve climate progress and energy security, we want more oil and gas produced in America, not less," Staples said.

Oil drilled in the Permian Basin and Gulf Coast has some of the lowest carbon emissions in the world, he added.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency data, he contends, shows the nation lowered carbon dioxide emissions by more than 8 percent from 2010 and 2019, while China's and Russia's rose 25 percent and 21 percent, respectively.

The agency's data also indicates methane emissions in the Permian Basin fell by 70 percent since 2011, while oil and gas production rose by 320 percent in that same period, Staples said.

However, some research tells a different story about methane, a potent greenhouse gas.

During a helicopter flight in December 2020, state and federal regulators, using an optical scanner, detected more than twice as much methane leaking from equipment on the Permian Basin than the year before.

And it was substantially more than operators report, according to the state Environment Department.

Climate researchers estimate methane is 80 times more powerful in warming the Earth over a 20-year period than carbon dioxide.

The state recently approved a rule to curb nitrogen oxide and volatile organic compounds, which form ground-level ozone, after high levels were found in counties in and around the Permian and San Juan basins, which have the bulk of the state's oil and gas activity.