FEBRUARY 2016
COMPLIMENTARY
boomingbasin.com INSIDE THIS EDITION
Oil slump continues. Page 3
Building boom continues. Page 9
Minot Daily News P.O. Box 1150 Minot, N.D. 58702
Change Service Requested
Oil production in N.D. counties. Pages 10-15
Flaring issue Cramer: More regs aren’t needed By ELOISE OGDEN Regional Editor eogden@minot
More regulations are not needed, said Congressman Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., in response to the U.S. Department of Interior’s announcement Friday of proposed regulations to regulate methane emissions from flaring on federal and tribal lands across the country, including North Dakota. Cramer said these regulations have nothing to do with protecting the environment and everything to do with shutting down the oil and gas industry in this country. “The president’s commitment to an extreme environmental agenda at the expense of a sound energy policy will adversely impact many businesses and cause job losses throughout the country. We do not need more regulations to limit the impact of flaring on the environment. The oil and gas industry understands the value of capturing the methane gas and using it to meet America’s energy needs,” Cramer said. Interior Department officials said the proposed rule on venting, flaring and leaking will help curb waste of the nation’s natural gas supplies, reduce harmful methane emissions and provide a fair return on public resources for federal taxpayers, tribes and states. Developed by Interior’s Bureau of Land Management, the proposed rule would require oil and gas producers to adopt currently available technologies, processes and equipment that would limit the rate of flaring at oil wells on public and tribal lands, and would require operators to periodically inspect their operations for leaks, and to replace outdated equipment that vents large quantities of gas into the air. Operators would also be required to limit venting from storage tanks and use best practices to limit gas losses when reSee FLARING — Page 4
Natural gas is flared from an oil well near Parshall.
AP File Photo
Existing federal rules 35 years old Dakota Resource Council and Taxpayers for Common Sense on Jan. 19 sent letters to the North Dakota congressional delegation and Gov. Jack Dalrymple, urging them to publicly support strong federal rules to limit the release of natural gas into
the atmosphere from oil and gas drilling on impact. “Oil and gas companies operating on federal lands. The two groups said it was imperative federal lands may release unlimited that leaders at the Bureau of Land Man- amounts of natural gas through venting or agement hear from elected officials in the states where this rule will have the most See RULES — Page 4