“EPA has determined that emissions of this potent greenhouse gas endanger public health and welfare, and that processes and equipment in the oil and gas sector emit vast quantities of methane,” Attorney General Jepsen said. “Yet the EPA failed to set standards and guidelines limiting methane emissions from oil and gas operations,” he said.
Pound for pound, methane warms the climate about 25 times more than carbon dioxide. EPA has found that the impacts of climate change caused by methane include “increased air and ocean temperatures, changes in precipitation patterns, melting and thawing of global glaciers and ice, increasingly severe weather events, such as hurricanes of greater intensity and sea-level rise.”
Oil and gas systems are the largest source of methane emissions in the United States and the second-largest industrial source of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions behind only electric power plants.
Connecticut joined with Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont in this effort.
Assistant Attorneys General Scott Koschwitz and Matthew Levine, Environment, and Kimberly Massicotte, Environment department head are assisting the Attorney General on this matter with Associate Attorney General Joseph Rubin.
Media Contact:
Attorney General
Susan E. Kinsman
Susan.Kinsman@ct.gov;
Office: 860-808-5324; Cell: 860-478-9581
Department of Energy and Environmental Protection:
Dennis Schain
Dennis.Schain@ct.gov
Office: 860-424-3110; Cell: 860-462-3468
Facebook: Attorney General George Jepsen
Twitter: @AGJepsen