Release date: 10/24/2007
Contact Information: Dave Ryan, (202) 564-4355 / ryan.dave@epa.gov
(Washington, D.C. - Oct. 24, 2007) EPA yesterday presented awards to some members of the oil and gas industry for their voluntary efforts to reduce methane under EPA's Natural Gas STAR Program.
The Natural Gas Star Program is a flexible, voluntary partnership between EPA and the oil and natural gas industry. Under the program, EPA works with companies that produce, process, transmit, and distribute natural gas to identify and implement cost-effective reductions in methane, a gas over 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide at trapping heat in the atmosphere.
In 2006 alone, oil and natural gas industry partners reported methane-emission reductions of approximately 85.9 billion cubic feet, equivalent to the annual greenhouse gas emissions of about 7.5 million cars.
The partner companies involved with Natural Gas Star represent roughly 62 percent of the total methane emissions from the U.S. oil and gas industry. In the United States, oil-and-gas systems are the largest human-caused source of methane, accounting for 26 percent of emissions. Working collaboratively with the Natural Gas Star Program, the domestic oil-and-gas industry now emits approximately 12 percent less methane than it did in 1990 – a substantial environmental accomplishment.
Yesterday's awards were presented during the 14th Annual Natural Gas Star Implementation Workshop in Houston, which brings together Natural Gas Star partners and industry experts to discuss the latest cost-effective methane-reduction technologies and practices.
As part of the workshop, EPA recognized nine new Natural Gas Star Partners:
Search This Collection | Search All Collections
Get email when we issue a news release related to air issues