Cookies help us run our site more efficiently.

By clicking “Accept”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyze site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts. View our Privacy Policy for more information or to customize your cookie preferences.

States want to clean up leaky oil wells. Well-intentioned laws are getting in the way.

News Feed
Friday, August 9, 2024

An estimated 880,000 abandoned oil and gas wells dot the United States. These orphaned wells, some of which were deserted as long as a century ago, can leak toxic oil and gas into the groundwater and air. They also emit methane, the planet-warming primary component of natural gas. In 2021, Congress appropriated $4.7 billion to help clean up the mess by giving states the money they need to seal the wells and remediate their surroundings. Over the last two years, the federal Department of Interior has doled out nearly $1 billion of this total. As of March, more than 7,700 wells have been remediated as a result.  But with hundreds of thousands of orphaned wells still to go, the road ahead is rocky, in part because states are struggling to meet the Interior Department’s requirements for receiving the remaining funding. The federal agency awarded an initial $25 million each to roughly 30 states with few strings attached. To receive funding from the next tranche, however, the agency has required that states demonstrate that their remediation efforts meet standards outlined in the Endangered Species Act and the National Historic Preservation Act. As a result, state oil and gas departments, which have little to no experience navigating such requirements, are hiring additional staff and creating new procedures to ensure that, as they clean up thousands of decrepit and leaky oil wells across the nation, they also protect endangered species and cultural sites. The early results of these added requirements show that the pace of cleanup is slowing: Texas, for example, plugged 60 percent fewer wells during the first five months of receiving a recent round of federal funding compared to the period following an earlier grant that did not include these requirements.  “Each tranche seems to get a little harder, a little higher cost, a little more complexity, a greater burden,’” said Dennis Hatfield, Kentucky’s oil and gas division director. “We want to plug them all, but if they [federal officials] make it hard enough, states are going to struggle to meet that standard.” It’s supposed to be oil and gas companies, rather than state officials like Hatfield, who are responsible for cleaning up well sites. But when companies go bankrupt or otherwise disappear, the responsibility falls to states, tribes, and the federal government. When Congress passed the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, it included three rounds of grants to help clear the growing backlog of orphan wells. The initial grant of up to $25 million per state was intended to put plugging companies back to work at a time when oil prices were low and the industry was in free fall. Most states have already used that funding, and they’ve reported the amount of avoided methane emissions as a result. (In a report to Congress late last year, the Interior Department noted that regulators in California, Colorado, Louisiana, and New Mexico had plugged 328 of roughly 500 orphan wells that were emitting the equivalent of approximately 11,500 metric tons of carbon dioxide a year.) The second tranche of money, which consists of so-called formula grants and makes up nearly half of the total $4.7 billion appropriated in the infrastructure law, comes with additional requirements. States are currently in the process of applying for and receiving funding from this second tranche. The final tranche, which consists of so-called performance grants that the Interior Department has not yet begun disbursing, are intended to incentivize state legislatures to provide matching funds for cleanup and encourage policy reforms to reduce orphan well burdens going forward.  “There was a slightly different goal with each bucket,” said Adam Peltz, a director and senior attorney at the nonprofit Environmental Defense Fund. “But a unifying goal was to facilitate the plugging of wells.” Read Next Inside the rough-and-tumble race to clean up America’s abandoned oil wells Will Peischel Grist contacted oil and gas divisions in 10 state governments; spoke to regulators in Michigan, Kentucky, North Dakota, and New Mexico; and reviewed public comments submitted by states to understand how they’re navigating the Interior Department’s requirements for utilizing well-plugging funds. Many states have faced challenges in trying to comply with the requirements that the Interior Department has put in place as a condition for receiving formula grants, particularly the Endangered Species Act and the National Historic Preservation Act requirements. The Interior Department is mandating that states conduct assessments of every well site where reclamation work is planned and submit lengthy reports confirming that the cleanup will not further imperil endangered species or damage cultural sites. That has meant hiring biologists to evaluate the reclamation plan for every one of potentially hundreds of well sites to determine if remediation work might have an adverse effect on an endangered species. States are also required to contact tribes that currently have a presence in the vicinity of well cleanup, as well as those with a historical connection to the region, in order to comply with the National Historic Preservation Act. The process has stumped state regulators who don’t have an easy way to identify the appropriate tribes or contact them. There’s also the added irony that these preservation laws, which date back to the 1960s and 1970s, in many cases did nothing to protect these sites from drilling in the first place, but they are now standing in the way of returning the lands to something like their earlier conditions. “There could be some earth moving-going on, but it’s also the case that there was earth moving-going on in the first place,” explained Peltz. “There’s questions of whether there could really be anything of historical value, given that these are already sites being returned to their previous state.” States have spent recent months designing processes to meet these requirements. In Michigan, the state’s Oil, Gas, and Minerals Division is hiring an archaeological firm to help assess whether cleanups will disturb cultural sites. In North Dakota, which has wetlands that migratory fowl depend on, the state is putting together a plan to ensure that reclamation work doesn’t affect the whooping crane and other endangered species.  “We had some growing pains.”— Dylan Fuge, deputy secretary of New Mexico’s Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department “There’s a lot of unknowns due to the fact that we haven’t done it yet,” said David Tabor, a field supervisor with North Dakota’s Department of Mineral Resources. Tabor said that scheduling reclamation work was proving to be particularly “challenging” because of the state’s harsh winters and the fact that migratory fowl move through the state in the spring. “We only have three to four months when we can actually do reclamation work,” he said.  Most state oil and gas departments have not had to navigate federal historic preservation and endangered species laws previously. Unlike state transportation departments, which oversee the construction of major roadways, environmental and minerals divisions regulate the oil and gas industry but have not managed the kind of major construction projects that typically require federal environmental clearance.  “There are going to be some lessons learned,” said Dylan Fuge, Deputy Secretary of New Mexico’s Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department. “We had some growing pains.” Giovanni Rocco, a spokesperson for the Interior Department, said that it’s because of requirements written into the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that activities “with the potential to affect historic properties” are subject to review under the National Historic Preservation Act. Similarly, a section of the Endangered Species Act requires that orphan well cleanups do not jeopardize endangered species or have an adverse effect on critical habitats. Even as states navigate the requirements of the formula grants, they’re beginning to look ahead to the performance grants. Congress set aside $1.5 billion for two types of performance grants: matching grants and regulatory improvements grants. The former is intended to incentivize state legislatures to find additional funds for cleanup, and the latter is contingent on states improving their orphan well policies to prevent wells from becoming abandoned in the first place. Late last year, the Interior Department accepted public comments on how it should assess whether states will qualify for regulatory improvement grants. The law notes that states need to demonstrate that they either strengthened well-plugging standards or else introduced policy reforms that would reduce the number of wells that are likely to be orphaned in the future. But since the law doesn’t explicitly lay out how states should demonstrate compliance with those provisions, the Interior Department requested comments on how it should assess the effectiveness of the regulatory programs. Across the board, states asked for flexibility. The Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission, or IOGCC, a quasi-governmental body created by Congress that represents oil- and gas-producing states, noted that the types of improvements that will best serve a state will vary depending on the geology, climate, and nature of oil and gas operations. Every state also has a different regulatory program, which makes a one-size-fits-all approach difficult to implement, according to the commenters.  “Nothing gives [the Interior Department] authority to dictate what improvements a state must make to qualify for a regulatory improvement grant,” the executive director of the IOGCC wrote in the public comments.  Read Next This influential group behind the Halliburton loophole doesn’t lobby. So why did it hire a lobbyist? Naveena Sadasivam Rocco, the Interior Department spokesperson, said that guidance on regulatory improvement grants is “in development” and that “relevant lessons learned” from issuing formula grants will be taken into consideration.  In recent years, many states have passed laws or updated their rules to better regulate orphan wells. Oil and gas companies are required to post bonds to cover the cost of cleaning up wells in case they file for bankruptcy. But the bonding requirements have long been inadequate, and bonds in most states have covered just a small fraction of the cost of cleanup. Several states, including Colorado and California, have recently updated their bonding requirements as a result. States have also updated their policies on how long a well can remain idle without being plugged. Such provisions are expected to help limit the number of orphan wells that end up on state cleanup rosters.  But these improvements have only made a small dent in the orphan well problem. In public hearings, private meetings, and surveys, states have acknowledged the scale of the issue and their limited capabilities to tackle it. In a recent survey obtained by Documented, a watchdog group investigating the influence of money on politics, the IOGCC asked state regulators if wells being passed from compliant, well-funded companies to poor operators who might go on to abandon them was a problem in their states. That problem often looks like this: Oil and gas wells are typically most productive when they’re first drilled. Over time, the amount of product that a company can extract diminishes. As profits from a well dwindle, companies often transfer such wells to smaller companies operating with tighter margins. When oil prices plummet or other economic shocks affect the market, these smaller companies are the first to file for bankruptcy, often abandoning their wells in the process. In response to the IOGCC’s question on the matter, many states acknowledged the prevalence of the issue.  “We commonly enter into consent orders with the new operator before transferring wells,” the West Virginia regulator wrote. “Unfortunately, this is not extremely successful.” The Michigan regulator noted that the issue is “difficult to prevent,” particularly if the smaller operator is in compliance with all state regulations prior to any well abandonment. “We do not see a solution to control that shift,” Kentucky’s regulator said of the same problem. The responses suggest that orphan well counts are likely to continue growing despite the federal government’s initiatives. Most states that Grist spoke to said that, based on policy changes they’ve made in recent years, they are likely to qualify for the regulatory improvement grants. However, Tabor, the North Dakota field supervisor, said that his state did not plan to apply for the grant, in part because he didn’t believe they would have additional wells to plug and in part because of the challenges of meeting the federal government’s requirements.  “The money and manpower being spent just to meet the requirements is making it to where we feel our state methods, rules, regulations, and funding is the more appropriate way to go,” he said. Ultimately, if some states don’t claim their share of the funding, the Interior Department may route the money to states in need that prove they meet the requirements. “After all, the demand for well-plugging dollars is essentially infinite,” said Peltz. This story was originally published by Grist with the headline States want to clean up leaky oil wells. Well-intentioned laws are getting in the way. on Aug 9, 2024.

Hard-to-meet federal requirements are slowing down the pace of remediation, state regulators say.

An estimated 880,000 abandoned oil and gas wells dot the United States. These orphaned wells, some of which were deserted as long as a century ago, can leak toxic oil and gas into the groundwater and air. They also emit methane, the planet-warming primary component of natural gas. In 2021, Congress appropriated $4.7 billion to help clean up the mess by giving states the money they need to seal the wells and remediate their surroundings. Over the last two years, the federal Department of Interior has doled out nearly $1 billion of this total. As of March, more than 7,700 wells have been remediated as a result. 

But with hundreds of thousands of orphaned wells still to go, the road ahead is rocky, in part because states are struggling to meet the Interior Department’s requirements for receiving the remaining funding. The federal agency awarded an initial $25 million each to roughly 30 states with few strings attached. To receive funding from the next tranche, however, the agency has required that states demonstrate that their remediation efforts meet standards outlined in the Endangered Species Act and the National Historic Preservation Act. As a result, state oil and gas departments, which have little to no experience navigating such requirements, are hiring additional staff and creating new procedures to ensure that, as they clean up thousands of decrepit and leaky oil wells across the nation, they also protect endangered species and cultural sites. The early results of these added requirements show that the pace of cleanup is slowing: Texas, for example, plugged 60 percent fewer wells during the first five months of receiving a recent round of federal funding compared to the period following an earlier grant that did not include these requirements. 

“Each tranche seems to get a little harder, a little higher cost, a little more complexity, a greater burden,’” said Dennis Hatfield, Kentucky’s oil and gas division director. “We want to plug them all, but if they [federal officials] make it hard enough, states are going to struggle to meet that standard.”

It’s supposed to be oil and gas companies, rather than state officials like Hatfield, who are responsible for cleaning up well sites. But when companies go bankrupt or otherwise disappear, the responsibility falls to states, tribes, and the federal government. When Congress passed the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, it included three rounds of grants to help clear the growing backlog of orphan wells. The initial grant of up to $25 million per state was intended to put plugging companies back to work at a time when oil prices were low and the industry was in free fall. Most states have already used that funding, and they’ve reported the amount of avoided methane emissions as a result. (In a report to Congress late last year, the Interior Department noted that regulators in California, Colorado, Louisiana, and New Mexico had plugged 328 of roughly 500 orphan wells that were emitting the equivalent of approximately 11,500 metric tons of carbon dioxide a year.)

The second tranche of money, which consists of so-called formula grants and makes up nearly half of the total $4.7 billion appropriated in the infrastructure law, comes with additional requirements. States are currently in the process of applying for and receiving funding from this second tranche. The final tranche, which consists of so-called performance grants that the Interior Department has not yet begun disbursing, are intended to incentivize state legislatures to provide matching funds for cleanup and encourage policy reforms to reduce orphan well burdens going forward. 

“There was a slightly different goal with each bucket,” said Adam Peltz, a director and senior attorney at the nonprofit Environmental Defense Fund. “But a unifying goal was to facilitate the plugging of wells.”

Grist contacted oil and gas divisions in 10 state governments; spoke to regulators in Michigan, Kentucky, North Dakota, and New Mexico; and reviewed public comments submitted by states to understand how they’re navigating the Interior Department’s requirements for utilizing well-plugging funds. Many states have faced challenges in trying to comply with the requirements that the Interior Department has put in place as a condition for receiving formula grants, particularly the Endangered Species Act and the National Historic Preservation Act requirements.

The Interior Department is mandating that states conduct assessments of every well site where reclamation work is planned and submit lengthy reports confirming that the cleanup will not further imperil endangered species or damage cultural sites. That has meant hiring biologists to evaluate the reclamation plan for every one of potentially hundreds of well sites to determine if remediation work might have an adverse effect on an endangered species. States are also required to contact tribes that currently have a presence in the vicinity of well cleanup, as well as those with a historical connection to the region, in order to comply with the National Historic Preservation Act. The process has stumped state regulators who don’t have an easy way to identify the appropriate tribes or contact them.

There’s also the added irony that these preservation laws, which date back to the 1960s and 1970s, in many cases did nothing to protect these sites from drilling in the first place, but they are now standing in the way of returning the lands to something like their earlier conditions.

“There could be some earth moving-going on, but it’s also the case that there was earth moving-going on in the first place,” explained Peltz. “There’s questions of whether there could really be anything of historical value, given that these are already sites being returned to their previous state.”

States have spent recent months designing processes to meet these requirements. In Michigan, the state’s Oil, Gas, and Minerals Division is hiring an archaeological firm to help assess whether cleanups will disturb cultural sites. In North Dakota, which has wetlands that migratory fowl depend on, the state is putting together a plan to ensure that reclamation work doesn’t affect the whooping crane and other endangered species. 

“We had some growing pains.”

— Dylan Fuge, deputy secretary of New Mexico’s Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department

“There’s a lot of unknowns due to the fact that we haven’t done it yet,” said David Tabor, a field supervisor with North Dakota’s Department of Mineral Resources. Tabor said that scheduling reclamation work was proving to be particularly “challenging” because of the state’s harsh winters and the fact that migratory fowl move through the state in the spring.

“We only have three to four months when we can actually do reclamation work,” he said. 

Most state oil and gas departments have not had to navigate federal historic preservation and endangered species laws previously. Unlike state transportation departments, which oversee the construction of major roadways, environmental and minerals divisions regulate the oil and gas industry but have not managed the kind of major construction projects that typically require federal environmental clearance. 

“There are going to be some lessons learned,” said Dylan Fuge, Deputy Secretary of New Mexico’s Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department. “We had some growing pains.”

Giovanni Rocco, a spokesperson for the Interior Department, said that it’s because of requirements written into the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that activities “with the potential to affect historic properties” are subject to review under the National Historic Preservation Act. Similarly, a section of the Endangered Species Act requires that orphan well cleanups do not jeopardize endangered species or have an adverse effect on critical habitats.

Even as states navigate the requirements of the formula grants, they’re beginning to look ahead to the performance grants. Congress set aside $1.5 billion for two types of performance grants: matching grants and regulatory improvements grants. The former is intended to incentivize state legislatures to find additional funds for cleanup, and the latter is contingent on states improving their orphan well policies to prevent wells from becoming abandoned in the first place. Late last year, the Interior Department accepted public comments on how it should assess whether states will qualify for regulatory improvement grants. The law notes that states need to demonstrate that they either strengthened well-plugging standards or else introduced policy reforms that would reduce the number of wells that are likely to be orphaned in the future. But since the law doesn’t explicitly lay out how states should demonstrate compliance with those provisions, the Interior Department requested comments on how it should assess the effectiveness of the regulatory programs.

Across the board, states asked for flexibility. The Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission, or IOGCC, a quasi-governmental body created by Congress that represents oil- and gas-producing states, noted that the types of improvements that will best serve a state will vary depending on the geology, climate, and nature of oil and gas operations. Every state also has a different regulatory program, which makes a one-size-fits-all approach difficult to implement, according to the commenters. 

“Nothing gives [the Interior Department] authority to dictate what improvements a state must make to qualify for a regulatory improvement grant,” the executive director of the IOGCC wrote in the public comments. 

Rocco, the Interior Department spokesperson, said that guidance on regulatory improvement grants is “in development” and that “relevant lessons learned” from issuing formula grants will be taken into consideration. 

In recent years, many states have passed laws or updated their rules to better regulate orphan wells. Oil and gas companies are required to post bonds to cover the cost of cleaning up wells in case they file for bankruptcy. But the bonding requirements have long been inadequate, and bonds in most states have covered just a small fraction of the cost of cleanup. Several states, including Colorado and California, have recently updated their bonding requirements as a result. States have also updated their policies on how long a well can remain idle without being plugged. Such provisions are expected to help limit the number of orphan wells that end up on state cleanup rosters. 

But these improvements have only made a small dent in the orphan well problem. In public hearings, private meetings, and surveys, states have acknowledged the scale of the issue and their limited capabilities to tackle it. In a recent survey obtained by Documented, a watchdog group investigating the influence of money on politics, the IOGCC asked state regulators if wells being passed from compliant, well-funded companies to poor operators who might go on to abandon them was a problem in their states.

That problem often looks like this: Oil and gas wells are typically most productive when they’re first drilled. Over time, the amount of product that a company can extract diminishes. As profits from a well dwindle, companies often transfer such wells to smaller companies operating with tighter margins. When oil prices plummet or other economic shocks affect the market, these smaller companies are the first to file for bankruptcy, often abandoning their wells in the process.

In response to the IOGCC’s question on the matter, many states acknowledged the prevalence of the issue. 

“We commonly enter into consent orders with the new operator before transferring wells,” the West Virginia regulator wrote. “Unfortunately, this is not extremely successful.”

The Michigan regulator noted that the issue is “difficult to prevent,” particularly if the smaller operator is in compliance with all state regulations prior to any well abandonment. “We do not see a solution to control that shift,” Kentucky’s regulator said of the same problem.

The responses suggest that orphan well counts are likely to continue growing despite the federal government’s initiatives. Most states that Grist spoke to said that, based on policy changes they’ve made in recent years, they are likely to qualify for the regulatory improvement grants. However, Tabor, the North Dakota field supervisor, said that his state did not plan to apply for the grant, in part because he didn’t believe they would have additional wells to plug and in part because of the challenges of meeting the federal government’s requirements. 

“The money and manpower being spent just to meet the requirements is making it to where we feel our state methods, rules, regulations, and funding is the more appropriate way to go,” he said.

Ultimately, if some states don’t claim their share of the funding, the Interior Department may route the money to states in need that prove they meet the requirements. “After all, the demand for well-plugging dollars is essentially infinite,” said Peltz.

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline States want to clean up leaky oil wells. Well-intentioned laws are getting in the way. on Aug 9, 2024.

Read the full story here.
Photos courtesy of

China, World’s Largest Carbon Polluting Nation, Announces New Climate Goal to Cut Emissions

China, the world’s largest carbon polluting nation, has announced a new climate fighting goal to cut emissions by 7% to 10% by 2035

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — As Earth keeps heating up and its weather gets more extreme, more than 100 world leaders lined up Wednesday to talk of increased urgency and the need for stronger efforts to curb the spewing of heat-trapping gases.But few large concrete national plans — especially from major polluters China, Europe and India — were unveiled despite a pressing deadline and sticky Wednesday warmth.With major international climate negotiations in Brazil 6½ weeks away, the United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres convened a special leaders summit during the General Assembly to focus on climate change. The idea is to get the countries to submit warming-fighting plans that are stronger, incorporate them throughout their economies and have them in line with an international temperature limit goal that is fast slipping away from reality. “The science demands action. The law commands it. The economics compel it. And people are calling for it,” Guterres said in opening the Wednesday afternoon marathon session with 121 leaders scheduled to speak. ‘Here we must admit failure’ “Warming appears to be accelerating,” climate scientist Johan Rockstrom said in a science briefing that started the summit. “Here we must admit failure. Failure to protect peoples and nations from unmanageable impacts of human-induced climate change.”“We’re dangerously close to triggering fundamental and irreversible change,” Rockstrom said. Under the 2015 Paris climate accord, 195 nations are supposed to submit new more stringent five-year plans on how to curb carbon emissions from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas. Technically the deadline was in February and about 50 nations — responsible for one-quarter of the world's carbon emissions — have filed theirs, including Pakistan, Micronesia, Mongolia, Liberia and Vanuatu. All of those nations submitted on Wednesday. UN officials said countries really need to get their plans in by the end of the month so the U.N. can calculate how much more warming Earth is on track for if nations do what they promise.Before 2015, the world was on path for 4 degrees Celsius (7.2 degrees Fahrenheit) of warming since pre-industrial times, but now has trimmed that to 2.6 degrees Celsius (4.7 degrees Fahrenheit), Guterres said.Kenyan President William Ruto said Wednesday that climate change was both the single greatest threat and development opportunity facing Africa, with the right action making the difference between survival and devastation.Without urgent action on climate change the world is “walking blindfolded towards the abyss,” Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said in a speech that opened the General Assembly on Tuesday.“Bombs and nuclear weapons will not protect us from the climate crisis,” said Lula, who will host the November climate negotiations in the Amazon city of Belem. He announced the launch of the Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF), a billion dollar program aimed at compensating countries for keeping forests standing.José Raúl Mulino Quintero, the president of Panama, said that although his country is already one of the few that emits less carbon than it absorbs with its forests, he promised they would reduce their carbon emissions further by 2035. “We believe one can always take another step for sustainability for future generations,” Quintero said. He said Panama would restore almost 250,000 acres (100,000 hectares) of critical ecosystems including mangroves and watersheds, “because nature is our first line of defense against climate change.”The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

Chris Bowen meets Turkey’s first lady as lobbying to hold Cop31 intensifies

Exclusive: Climate minister, who is trying to persuade Turkey to allow Australia to host the summit, appears with Emine Erdoğan at New York event Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastClimate change and energy minister Chris Bowen has appeared with Turkey’s first lady, Emine Erdoğan, at a major environment event in New York as negotiations over hosting rights for the COP31 summit come down to the wire.Bowen – who is in the US for talks at the UN general assembly – has been lobbying Turkey to drop its rival bid to host the conference in 2026 in order to secure the event on behalf of Australia and Pacific nations. Continue reading...

Climate change and energy minister Chris Bowen has appeared with Turkey’s first lady, Emine Erdoğan, at a major environment event in New York as negotiations over hosting rights for the COP31 summit come down to the wire.Bowen – who is in the US for talks at the UN general assembly – has been lobbying Turkey to drop its rival bid to host the conference in 2026 in order to secure the event on behalf of Australia and Pacific nations.Anthony Albanese is seeking a meeting with the country’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, as part of the negotiations, but the first lady is critical to any breakthrough.A longtime environmental campaigner, she hosted dignitaries at the Zero Waste Blue exhibition on New York’s upper east side on Thursday morning, Australian time. Bowen spoke to the first lady and Turkey’s climate minister Murat Kurum.The event was planned to show off Turkey’s environmental bona fides, including protection of the oceans, and to “strengthen environmental diplomacy by creating a platform for partnership and cooperation”.Organisers said the New York meeting would enhance Turkey’s “global visibility in environmental policy” and “create global awareness under the leadership of Mrs Emine Erdoğan”.Bowen’s attendance had been planned for some weeks, part of his efforts at respectful diplomatic engagement. He was the only foreign government minister in attendance.Photos provided to Guardian Australia show Bowen and Erdoğan posing with other guests.Bowen also spoke to the president of Azerbaijan’sCop29 summit, Mukhtar Babayev.Turkey is adamant its time has come to host the annual event after withdrawing from the race to host Cop26, which ultimately went to Glasgow.Any decision on the host country has to be made through consensus, or the event will default to Bonn in Germany.Both Bowen and Albanese have declined to discuss the status of negotiations with Turkey, but describe Australia’s support among partner countries as overwhelming. Australia has at least 23 votes among the critical 28-country Western European and Others Group whose turn it is to host the annual summit.“I’ve had good and positive conversations with Türkiye, and when there’s more to say, we’ll say,” Bowen told journalists a day before the event in New York.“We do want a very investment focused Cop, on investing in Australia’s renewable energy superpower, as well as lifting the agenda of the Pacific, whose very existence of several countries is at stake.”Asked if a resolution could be achieved before he leaves New York for London, the prime minister said he was not sure.“I will be having discussions with President Erdoğan as well. I’ve had a short discussion with the foreign minister… and my ministers and Turkish ministers are having those discussions.”Albanese and Bowen spruiked Australia as an investment destination to business figures at an event hosted by Macquarie Group, as they pitch returns from the growing renewable energy transition and extraction and processing of critical minerals.Albanese was due to speak at a special climate summit hosted by UN secretary general António Guterres and a separate New York Times conference on climate on Thursday.“This is the decisive decade for acting on the environmental challenge of climate change – and seizing the economic opportunities of clean energy,” he will tell the UN.“We all grasp the scale and the urgency of our task.“If we act now, if we move with common purpose and shared resolve, then we can do more than just guard against the very worst.”

UN Climate Leader Urges Action to Match Promises at Climate Week NYC

By Katy Daigle and Simon JessopNEW YORK (Reuters) -Speakers at Climate Week NYC delivered a clear message to world leaders on Monday: the global...

By Katy Daigle and Simon JessopNEW YORK (Reuters) -Speakers at Climate Week NYC delivered a clear message to world leaders on Monday: the global energy transition is happening now and it's happening fast, at the event which brings together leaders, advocates and the U.N. General Assembly.The U.N.'s top climate official opened a morning session at the annual event by urging the world to turn promises into practical solutions.“This new era of climate action must be about bringing our process closer to the real economy,” said Simon Stiell, executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.The premier of Antigua and Barbuda urged wealthy counterparts to speed their efforts, with climate change having become an existential crisis for nations like his.“For small islands, it turns every storm into a fiscal catastrophe,” Antigua and Barbuda Prime Minister Gaston Browne said.LEADERS PRESSED TO SHOW CLIMATE PROGRESS EVEN AS AID IS CUTWorld leaders at the U.N. General Assembly this week will be pressed to show progress on climate, particularly after recent cutbacks in development aid as wealthy countries also juggle war and economic stability.G20 members Britain, Japan and Australia recently announced new climate plans, or Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). More countries are expected to share their updates this week, including China."We now look to China, the world's top emitter, to fully commit to the Paris Agreement it helped craft by issuing an NDC that charts a credible path to that country’s goal of net zero before 2060," said John Podesta, former climate advisor to U.S. President Joe Biden."This means roughly a 30% emissions reduction, covering all greenhouse gases, by 2035, below peak 2024 levels, which new data demonstrates that they reached."BENEFITS OF CLEAN ENERGY BOOM 'NOT SHARED BY ALL'With the U.N. climate summit, COP30, in November, Stiell also took time to celebrate progress that has been made, noting that investment in renewables had increased tenfold in 10 years."The clean energy transition is booming across almost all major economies," he said, adding it hit $2 trillion last year."But this boom is uneven. Its vast benefits are not shared by all," Stiell said. "Meanwhile, climate disasters are hitting every economy and society harder each year. So we need to step it up fast."He also said a new global initiative called Build Clean Now would help to fast-track clean industry shifts.Also on Monday, an alliance working to boost renewables said it plans to spur $7.5 billion in investment toward green energy in developing countries, including India.CLIMATE CHANGE STILL A 'SYSTEMIC RISK' GLOBALLY"Despite political debate globally, varying regulations between markets, emerging de-regulation and reports of corporates deprioritizing ESG, climate change remains a critical systemic risk across the world," said Omar Ali, EY Global Financial Services Leader.A boost to joint decision-making came last week, after countries ratified the High Seas Treaty, which sets into motion the first legal framework for protecting the vast ocean areas that lie beyond any national jurisdiction. The treaty contains 75 points covering areas such as protecting, caring for and ensuring responsible use of marine resources, and includes a provision for requiring environmental impact assessments for economic activities in international waters.WWF International director general Kirsten Schuijt called it a "monumental achievement for ocean conservation" and "a positive catalyst for collaboration across international waters."(Reporting by Simon Jessop and Katy Daigle; Additional reporting by Valerie Volcovici and Virginia Furness; Editing by Bernadette Baum)Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

Ted Cruz claims without evidence that China is funding U.S. climate lawsuits

Republican Sen. Ted Cruz has said China is funding climate lawsuits against American oil and gas companies to weaken the U.S. He hasn't provided evidence to support the claim.

A firefighter battles the Canyon Fire in August in Hasley Canyon, Calif. As temperatures rise with human-caused climate change, wildfire risk is getting worse. (Marcio Jose Sanchez | AP)States and localities have filed waves of lawsuits against the fossil fuel industry to make energy companies pay for damages that communities face from climate change. Threatened with potentially huge financial penalties, industry and its supporters recently turned to the Supreme Court for help — without success. Now, Sen. Ted Cruz, the Texas Republican, has launched a new line of attack that could help industry by focusing on the money that’s allegedly behind the climate cases. At a June hearing on Capitol Hill, Cruz accused China of funding the lawsuits in order to cripple U.S. oil and gas producers and to strengthen Beijing’s position in global energy markets. If the community court cases succeed, Cruz said U.S. energy production would fall and prices would rise. “And the biggest winner in all of this: China, who’s paying the bills,” he said. However, Cruz’s office has not offered evidence that China or a China-linked nonprofit that Cruz identified by name has funded climate lawsuits in the United States. A spokesperson for Cruz, Macarena Martinez, provided NPR with a response from ChatGPT that reads, in part: “What’s not publicly demonstrated (so far) is a direct, documented grant-to-lawsuit pipeline.” Cruz’s unsubstantiated claim is part of a yearslong effort by the fossil-fuel industry and its allies to fight lawsuits that state and local governments have filed against oil and gas companies, according to environmental advocates and Democratic lawmakers. The litigation alleges that corporations misled the public for decades about the dangers of burning fossil fuels, the primary cause of climate change. The lawsuits seek money to help communities cope with the risks and harms from global warming, including more extreme storms, floods and heat waves. For years, Republican lawmakers have probed the funding sources for America’s environmental movement. That scrutiny has focused more recently on climate litigation as cases proliferated around the country. This summer, a group of Republican state attorneys general called for a federal law to protect energy companies from “activist-funded climate lawsuits.” Ryan Meyers, general counsel for the American Petroleum Institute, a trade group for the oil and gas industry, said in a statement to NPR that the climate lawsuits are “baseless” and a “coordinated campaign” against energy companies. “Climate policy belongs in Congress,” Meyers said, “not a patchwork of courtrooms.” The American Petroleum Institute would not comment on the record about Cruz’s allegation that China is funding the lawsuits. John Chung-En Liu, an associate professor of sociology at National Taiwan University who has studied Chinese climate propaganda on social media, says framing U.S. climate litigation as a China-funded campaign is “an easy tactic” to whip up opposition. “China doesn’t have a very good name in Washington, D.C.,” Liu says, and Beijing does try to influence politics and public opinion globally on a range of issues. China’s embassy in Washington did not respond to messages seeking comment for this story. Sen. Ted Cruz departs a meeting with Senate Republicans in the U.S. Capitol in June. Cruz has claimed that China is funding climate lawsuits in the United States. His office has not offered evidence to support that allegation. (Al Drago/Getty Images | Getty Images North America)‘We should be very careful to actually know what’s real and what’s not’ The alleged funding scheme that Cruz described in June revolves around a nonprofit called Energy Foundation China. Headquartered in San Francisco with an office in Beijing, the group is led by a former official at China’s National Center for Climate Change Strategy and International Cooperation. Last year, GOP lawmakers asked Energy Foundation China for documents related to its funding of U.S. organizations. At the Senate hearing this summer, Cruz said Energy Foundation China is “one of the primary vehicles” for an international alliance between “leftist billionaires, radical environmental organizations and the Chinese Communist Party.” “And this money isn’t going to tree-planting campaigns or to science fairs,” Cruz said. “It’s flowing directly to aggressive litigation outfits, like the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Rocky Mountain Institute and the World Resources Institute.” Energy Foundation China has given money to all three of those groups, according to tax filings. But Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, a Democrat from Rhode Island, said at the June hearing that Cruz hadn’t provided evidence that the money was used to pay for U.S. lawsuits — as opposed to trying to cut climate pollution in China. “If it turns out that China is supporting lawsuits in the United States, that would be extremely troubling. And so I think we should be very careful to actually know what’s real and what’s not,” says Ilaria Mazzocco, a senior fellow who focuses on Chinese business and economics at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. A spokesperson for the Rocky Mountain Institute, Adam Beitman, said in a statement to NPR that the nonprofit does not participate in litigation, and that all of the funding it has received from Energy Foundation China “is focused squarely on the energy transition inside of China.” A spokesperson for the World Resources Institute, Alison Cinnamond, said her organization does not participate in litigation, nor does it direct legal action by other groups. “WRI’s work in China focuses on issues like air quality, sustainable cities, energy efficiency, and resilience — areas that are essential for global well-being,” Cinnamond said in a statement. Michael Wall, the chief litigation officer for the Natural Resources Defense Council, says the nonprofit has used funding from Energy Foundation China exclusively for programs to cut climate pollution in China. In the U.S., NRDC has sued government agencies and corporations that have violated environmental laws, Wall says, and the nonprofit is defending state laws in New York and Vermont to force fossil fuel companies to help cover the costs of climate change. An executive at Energy Foundation China, Vance Wagner, said in a statement that the nonprofit is an independent organization that funds research and other initiatives to address climate change in China, which is the biggest source of heat-trapping pollution globally. Wagner said the group doesn’t fund or engage in activism, litigation or lobbying in any country. An oil pumpjack is seen near a field of wind turbines in Nolan, Texas. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images | Getty Images North America)Republican attorneys general want to shield energy companies from lawsuits Days before Cruz accused China of bankrolling the climate cases, more than a dozen Republican state attorneys general sent a letter to U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi asking the Justice Department to recommend federal legislation to give energy companies a “liability shield” to protect them from climate litigation. The Justice Department’s Office of Policy and Legislation is charged with developing legislative proposals, among other duties. Earlier this month, for example, the department sent Congress proposed legislation that would prohibit doctors from providing gender-affirming care to children. In the letter to Bondi, the Republican attorneys general wrote that the legal protection they want to create for energy companies is similar to a 2005 law called the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, which generally shields gun manufacturers and dealers from civil lawsuits when firearms are used in criminal activity. Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach, a Republican who signed the letter to Bondi, then served as an expert witness at Cruz’s hearing about China. “I think that where Congress can be helpful in these [climate] cases is in getting to the bottom of where the money is coming from,” Kobach said at the hearing. Cruz’s allegation of Chinese funding was designed “to create political cover” for Congress to give fossil fuel companies legal immunity from climate litigation, says Richard Wiles, president of the Center for Climate Integrity, which supports climate lawsuits against the fossil fuel industry by filing legal briefs and providing plaintiffs with documents. The Justice Department did not respond to messages seeking comment. So far, the climate lawsuits filed by states and localities have had mixed results. Some cases have been dismissed by judges who ruled that climate pollution is an issue for the federal government to deal with. But other lawsuits are moving toward trial. In January, the Supreme Court rejected an effort by oil and gas companies to block a climate lawsuit filed by Honolulu. And in March the justices turned down a request by Republican attorneys general to stop climate lawsuits filed by states including California, Connecticut, Minnesota and Rhode Island. “All these communities are asking is that the oil industry pay their fair share of the damages that they knowingly cause,” Wiles says. “It’s completely reasonable.” In a legal brief challenging a lawsuit that Boulder, Colorado filed against oil and gas companies, the Justice Department recently told the Supreme Court that allowing climate litigation to move forward in state courts exposes energy companies to billions of dollars in damages, as well as a confusing assortment of local regulations. Workers carry solar panels this spring to be installed in the desert in China’s northern Ningxia region. China is the world’s biggest producer of green technology, like solar panels and electric vehicles. (STR/AFP via Getty Images | AFP)Lawsuit critics say oil and gas companies are victims of Big Philanthropy Opponents of the climate lawsuits have long claimed that activists and deep-pocketed philanthropies have been colluding with Democratic politicians to hurt U.S. oil and gas companies. In 2023, Cruz and Rep. James Comer, a Kentucky Republican, asked for financial information from Sher Edling, a law firm that’s filed many of the climate lawsuits brought by states and localities. Last year, The Free Beacon, a conservative news site, published a Congressional memo that detailed funding that several nonprofits have given to Sher Edling. Since that money came from tax-exempt organizations, taxpayers effectively have been “bearing the cost” of Sher Edling’s legal work, according to the memo, which was written by Republican staffers on the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee and the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability. The memo added: “Although not illegal, this structure allows the green mafia to achieve its political goals while lowering its tax bill.” The Congressional memo names three nonprofits that gave money to Sher Edling: New Venture Fund, the Tides Foundation and Resources Legacy Fund. Tax filings show that all three got funding from Energy Foundation China, but two of them got those grants before they started funding Sher Edling. Of the three, Resources Legacy Fund in 2017 got $185,00 from Energy Foundation China, according to an Energy Foundation China tax filing. The money was meant “to promote education and analysis to build markets for clean, affordable energy that protects public health.” That same year, Resources Legacy Fund gave Sher Edling about $432,000 for “land or marine conservation,” according to a Resources Legacy Fund tax filing. Resources Legacy Fund did not respond to messages seeking comment. Neither did the Tides Foundation. New Venture Fund declined to comment. Sher Edling declined to comment for this story. Wall of the Natural Resources Defense Council rejected the idea that philanthropic funding has unfairly disadvantaged oil and gas companies in court. “There’s simply no comparison between the resources the oil industry has and the resources that nonprofits have,” he says. “Litigation is a way for people to participate in the governmental process by working to ensure that the laws that protect them are enforced and carried out.” In a letter to Cruz and Comer last year that was obtained by NPR, a lawyer for Sher Edling wrote that fossil fuel companies that are defendants in the climate cases “fear that the communities will prevail in those lawsuits — and so they now hope that you will run interference for them. Respectfully, you should not.” When Cruz accused China of funding U.S. climate lawsuits this summer, he said Beijing’s goal is to establish “global energy dominance and control.” China is the world’s biggest producer of green technology, like solar panels and electric vehicles. And Republican lawmakers and conservative activists for years have argued that climate policies that shift the U.S. away from fossil fuels would make America dependent on Chinese supply chains. But Liu of National Taiwan University says Beijing is probably content to have the U.S. focus on oil and gas, rather than to challenge China in other parts of the energy market. “China wants to be the leader in the key technology in the future, so that they don’t have to be controlled by the West,” Liu says, adding: “If we are following this train of thought, then they will prefer [the] U.S. not taking climate very seriously, and let China take over all the EVs, take over solar and wind.”

Suggested Viewing

Join us to forge
a sustainable future

Our team is always growing.
Become a partner, volunteer, sponsor, or intern today.
Let us know how you would like to get involved!

CONTACT US

sign up for our mailing list to stay informed on the latest films and environmental headlines.

Subscribers receive a free day pass for streaming Cinema Verde.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.