The Texas Railroad Commission must tap the brakes on oil and gas production

Jan. 5, James Coleman, associate professor at SMU Dallas with a specialty in energy law at Dedman School of Law in Dallasfor a piece encouraging The Texas Railroad Commission to tweak regulations to curb wasteful practices – burning off an over-abundance of natural gas at an alarming rate. Published in the Dallas Morning News: http://bit.ly/2N1HWov 

By James Coleman

Texas is now the center of history’s biggest oil and gas boom. This boom, like past booms, is cementing the U.S. as the world’s superpower. But as in those earlier booms, our regulators may need to slow production slightly to preserve our natural resources and the health of our oil industry.

Texas producers are now draining so much oil and natural gas that there aren’t enough purchasers to use all of the gas. Oil and gas often come from the same well. The industry sells the oil but cannot build pipelines fast enough to get all the new gas production to distant gas consumers. As a result, producers are burning off, or flaring, more and more gas — wasting this clean burning gas, which is prized by consumers and industry around the world. . .

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Biden’s proposed ban would harm economy, environment

Sept. 4, James Coleman, law professor in Dedman School of Law specializing in energy law, for a piece questioning Joe Biden’s idea to suspend all oil & gas permits on U.S. public lands. Published in the Las Vegas Review Journal:  https://www.reviewjournal.com/opinion/bidens-proposed-ban-would-harm-economy-environment-1840407/

Former Vice President Joe Biden’s new climate plan promises to start his Presidency with a series of “Day One Unprecedented Executive Actions” that include “banning new oil and gas permitting on public land and water.” Biden and the other Democratic candidates should make clear whether they support this ban, which would reverse President Barack Obama’s energy policies and lay waste to America’s growing energy economy.

Biden’s order would completely shut down drilling on public lands — including the 85 percent of Nevada owned by the federal government. No new leases and no permits for new wells on existing leases.This ban would violate the laws Congress has made to govern public lands but it would be very difficult to challenge in court. Even if a judge ordered Biden’s administration to continue issuing permits, it could slow-walk them or throw up other obstacles to make it practically impossible to drill on public lands. . .

 

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