Oil Firms, Nations Agree to End Gas Flaring
Group agrees to end practice of
routine flaring of natural gas by 2030
By Amy Harder in the Wall Street Journal
WASHINGTON—Twenty-five major oil
companies, oil-producing nations and development institutions agreed Friday to
end the practice of routine flaring of natural gas by 2030 at thousands of oil
production sites around the world.
Royal Dutch Shell, Statoil,
Kuwait Oil Co., Russia, Norway and
the Asian Development Bank are among those making the commitment, which was
announced by the World Bank and United Nations at an event in Washington
Friday. No U.S.-based companies have signed onto the initiative.
Many producers regularly burn off
natural gas as carbon dioxide into the atmosphere when producing oil for a
variety of reasons, including lack of infrastructure to move the gas and low
economic incentive to use the gas.
Andrei Lushin, World Bank Group
Executive Director for Russia, said in remarks at the event that the country
flares the most gas associated with oil production in the world. “That is a
problem of course, but this is also a potential to achieve large gains in
reducing gas flaring,” Mr. Lushin said. “The government sees petroleum gas
flaring as a waste of valuable resource and a very harmful practice for global
climate.” Russia is one of the world’s largest producers of both oil and
natural gas.
The World Bank and U.N. are
announcing the new initiative as a way to build support for a conference in
December hosted by the U.N. aimed at forging a global agreement to cut carbon
emissions.
“As we head toward the adoption of a
meaningful new international climate agreement in Paris in December, these
countries and companies are demonstrating real climate action,” U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Friday. “Reducing gas flaring can make a
significant contribution toward mitigating climate change. I appeal to all
oil-producing countries and companies to join this important initiative.”
The World Bank says the initial
endorsements of the initiative represent 40% of global gas flaring and that
those committed already will work to get more companies and countries to sign
onto the effort. Emissions from flared gas represent about 1% of global carbon
emissions, according to World Bank officials.
A spokesman for the American
Petroleum Institute, the largest U.S. oil and natural-gas trade group, said
U.S. government data show that U.S. producers keep cutting greenhouse-gas
emissions without new federal regulations. “These voluntary efforts will
continue as operators work to capture more gas and deliver it to consumers,”
API spokesman Carlton Carroll said.
World Bank officials said they are
talking with U.S. companies and the Energy Department about more involvement
from U.S.-based organizations and companies.
“We have seen that when industry
sets a target and aligns its efforts with government, results can be
astonishing in scale and dimension,” World Bank President Jim Yong Kim said
Friday.
Poster’s comments:
1) This is a big deal if it ever happens.
2) Some of
that gas is H2S (hydrogen sulfide) which is poisonous to we humans. It is not
all natural gas (mostly methane (CH4) [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methane])
like we know it in the USA.
3) Unfortunately,
I am familiar with such burn off places, and it is pretty “warm” around them as
close as 1 Km.
4) Just look
at a night satellite photo of the earth, and you can probably pick out the
burn-off places that existed during the time of the photo.
5) Most
natural gas in the USA does not smell, so that sulfur/rotten egg smell from
natural gas leaks in places it is used is usually just “inserted” into the gas.
6) Originally
in the USA natural gas (methane) was also burned off. Once people realized it
could be sold for heat and cooking, then things changed to much like what we
have today. Now the infrastructure to do so is pretty complicated, so good on
all those that make it happen routinely these days.
7) Flaring
means just burning off the gas as a flame.
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