ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico has reached a record settlement with a Texas-based company over air pollution violations at natural gas gathering sites in the Permian Basin. The $24.5 million agreement with Ameredev announced Monday is the largest settlement the state Environment Department has ever reached for a civil oil and gas violation. It stems from the flaring of billions of cubic feet of natural gas that the company had extracted over an 18-month period but wasn’t able to transport to downstream processors. Environment Secretary James Kenney said in an interview that the flared gas would have been enough to have supplied nearly 17,000 homes for a year. “It’s completely the opposite of the way it’s supposed to work,” Kenney said. “Had they not wasted New Mexico’s resources, they could have put that gas to use.” The flaring, or burning off of the gas, resulted in more than 7.6 million pounds of excess emissions that included hydrogen sulfide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides and other gases that state regulators said are known to cause respiratory issues and contribute to climate change. |
Moment mysterious loud boom shakes houses as a huge flash lights up the night sky over VegasRachel Zegler channels a realChina unveils latest sciUS not a sincere mediator in IsraeliMore floods expected in China's Pearl River basinChinese, French experts seek multilateral future at global governance forumWestern Hemisphere nations pledge to continue coordinating response to historic regional migrationHamas to deliver final response to latest truce proposal in 2 days: sourceBoy Scouts of America is rebranding. Here's why they're now named Scouting AmericaChina to expedite building modern eco