Methane Leaks

   Issue Briefing  

Clear Ask to Policymakers: Public Utility Commissions should require utility companies to locate and eliminate methane leaks, prioritizing repairs and retirement over costly pipeline replacement.

Hot, toxic, expensive–methane leaks must be stopped.

Methane is a climate disaster hiding in plain sight. Leaks from natural gas pipelines release methane—an invisible, explosive, super-potent greenhouse gas —at volumes 3.5 - 8x greater than previous EPA estimates.  Here’s the kicker: It’s probably happening in your neighborhood. Across the U.S., more than 600,000 active leaks spew methane directly into homes, businesses, and neighborhood streets. With this much leakage, natural gas is worse for the climate than coal.

Utility companies are making the problem worse. Instead of quickly patching leaks or retiring the pipeline and transitioning customers to electricity, utility companies are 1) letting leaks gush methane for months — or even years or 2) replacing entire pipelines, locking in fossil fuel use, and passing the costs along to customers. 

Enter: The Public Utility Commission

Every state has a Public Utility Commission (PUC) that oversees utility companies, though it might  go by a different name in your state, like Public Service Commission. These small, highly technical teams are economic regulators that exist to protect the public interest.

PUCs are tasked with making sure utility companies:

  • Charge fair prices (or “rates”)

  • Offer safe and reliable service

  • And make smart long-term investments

In some states, a final priority is ensuring utility companies are on track to meet climate goals. However, it’s rarely the top priority, and most PUCs don’t have this authority at all. Economic and safety arguments are most persuasive. Jump to the glossary section below to learn more.

Since utility companies are not acting in the public interest when it comes to methane leaks, PUCs are well within their authority to step in and issue regulations. They have a long list of tools at their disposal (think: incentives, standards, requirements…). They should use any and all of them to require utility companies to find and stop methane leaks, prioritizing repairs and retirement over costly pipeline replacement. 

While a handful of PUCs have begun to implement some of these solutions, their proceedings are opaque and they haven’t delivered results: methane is still leaking at virtually unknown levels across the country, while utility companies scope out expensive, unnecessary replacement projects.

💡 As concerned members of the public, our job is to urge the PUCs to deliver results. We don’t need to get too deep in the weeds—it’s the commissioners’ jobs to propose the best technical solutions—we just need to contact them!

Jump to the solutions section below to learn more.

STOP! You know enough to take meaningful action.

Curious and want to learn more? Cool, scroll on!

Methane leaks everywhere, including in your neighborhood.

Below is a crowd-sourced list of mapped methane leaks across the country. Click here to submit a new map.

A couple of things to keep in mind:

  • When looking at a utility company’s map, consider it the lower limit for the true amount of leakage. A recent study shows they only catch 35% of leaks identified by newer technology, like the kind used by non-profit groups working to hold utilities accountable. 

  • Some maps have disclaimers saying serious leaks are acted on so promptly that they don’t make it onto the map in the first place. That may sound good, but remember: it means the leaks that are on the map may have been left to gush for months or even years, as utility companies merely “keep an eye on them,” because they’re “not sufficiently hazardous” to warrant action.  

See the methane leaks in your city:

False solution: Replacing pipelines.

Over the last 10-15 years, many utility companies have opted for replacing leaky and leak-prone pipelines. While it sounds proactive and responsible, it’s not necessary. Advanced repair technologies are just as safe and don't lock in new fossil fuel infrastructure at a time we should be transitioning away from it.

Here’s the kicker: Climate crisis aside, these pipeline replacement programs are impossibly expensive. Already today, U.S. gas utility companies are already spending tens of billions of dollars annually to replace their gas pipelines (see chart).

In Idaho, Oregon, and Washington, replacement will cost $1.3 billion. It will cost $8 billion in Philadelphia, $8-12 billion in Washington, D.C, and a whopping $42 billion in the state of Massachusetts.

Utility companies are hurtling down the financially irresponsible path of spending $1.4 trillion on new gas infrastructure by 2050. Decarbonization aside, this level of spending will lead to untenable rate increases for consumers and, consequently, stranded asset risk for utility companies, who soon may not serve enough customers to fully pay off the new infrastructure. While selective replacement will likely be necessary to ensure public safety, these plans are far from it.

Real Solutions: Detect, repair, and retire.

Public Utility Commissions need to step in. They can require utility companies to detect and eliminate methane leaks — but they key: prioritizing repairs and retirement over costly pipeline replacement. 

Dig deeper on the real solution levers:

Top Talking Points

Different decision-makers have different priorities. Choose the framing that you think will resonate best with your policymaker. Learn more about meeting your rep where they’re here.

The thing about methane leaks is they…

💰 …cost consumers money.

  • Every month, utility companies directly pass on to customers some or all of the cost of leaked methane , as a line item on our bills.

  • They also pass along the cost of (often unnecessary) pipeline replacements to customers in the form of rate increases

  • Since consumers pay the “commodity price” of the gas we consume, we are directly exposed to the volatility of the international gas market.

✊ …have disproportionate impacts. 

  • Low-income and communities of color are more likely to live around aging, leaking natural gas infrastructure or gas power plants, meaning they are disproportionately exposed to the associated health and safety risks. 

  • People with low incomes already pay a higher proportion of their income on energy, so they are disproportionately affected by energy price increases.

📉 …can tarnish a utility’s public image. 

  • No utility company wants  to draw repeated scrutiny for unreasonable rates and public safety scandals. For example, California’s Pacific Gas & Electric is the target of ever-increasing public ire amid increasing rates, rolling blackouts, and its role in sparking deadly wildfires.

☄️ …pose serious safety risks. 

  • Methane explosions are deadly and expensive. From 2010 - 2021, there were 2,600 fires or explosions that killed 122 people and cost over $4 billion. 

  • There is a hazardous pipeline incident every 40 hours in the U.S.

♥️ …are harmful to human health. 

  • Natural gas leaks also contain hazardous air pollutants like benzene and volatile organic compounds, which can cause or exacerbate respiratory illness, cancer, diabetes, premature births, and more. 

🇺🇸 …would be a popular policy with voters. 

  • Recent non-partisan polling shows that “setting strict limits on methane emissions from oil and gas production” is supported by 74% of registered voters, including 64% of moderate Republicans.  . 

Why hasn’t anyone done anything?

Methane leaks are the responsibility of gas utility companies to find and address. But if they’re such an egregious safety, financial, and climate problem, how are they are still allowed to persist? 

Natural gas leaks so much that it’s worse than coal. 

Natural gas is far from natural—it’s a fossil fuel whose primary ingredient is methane (85-95%), an incredibly potent greenhouse gas that is 80x worse than CO2 and responsible for 20-30% of the planetary warming we see today. We can think of methane and CO2 like a pair of evil twins. Methane molecules warm the planet a lot over a short amount of time (7-12 years, to be precise), whereas CO2 molecules warm the planet a little bit over hundreds of years. 

Stopping leaks is a strategic priority: Cutting methane emissions now is the best way to immediately slow the rate of global warming, while we work to decarbonize the entire economy. Per Project Drawdown, addressing methane is our “emergency brakes” for climate.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) vastly underestimates the true amount of leakage, because it relies on small sample sizes and self-reporting from the oil and gas industry.

  • 💥 In 2018, the EPA estimated a 1.4% leakage rate

  • 💥 But independent studies found the true rate to be 2.3% (1.6x higher), 5x higher, and even up to 3.5-8x higher than the EPA’s most recent estimates.

  • 💥 That means between 2.3% and 11.2% of methane could be leaking before it ever reaches homes.

With so many methane leaks, “natural” gas is as bad—or worse—for the climate than coal. A 2012 Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) study found that if methane leaks exceed 3%, natural gas becomes equally as harmful as coal for planetary warming. A 2023 study from Harvard, Duke, and Brown Universities and the Rocky Mountain Institute found an even lower threshold: just 0.2% leakage makes natural gas worse than coal. We are far past that threshold.

Where is it leaking? Everywhere. 

Some of the most high-profile methane leaks occur at extraction sites, where oil and gas companies fail to detect, report, or fix leaks. These leaks, often in gas-producing regions like the Southwest, Appalachia, and even urban Los Angeles County, are so significant that the Environmental Defense Fund has launched a satellite (aptly named ‘MethaneSAT’) to track them from space.

But the most widespread and hard-to-address source of methane leaks is from the 2+ million miles of local distribution pipelines. These lines run under city streets and directly into homes, powering stoves, furnaces, water heaters, and dryers. Leaks in the distribution network is like “death by a thousand cuts.”

Find a map of natural gas leaks in your area.

How did we get here?
Well, America lovvves “natural” gas.

In the United States, we use a lot of natural gas. Nearly half of it is burned to generate electricity, and the rest is used directly for industrial applications, like powering manufacturing equipment, or to heat our homes and businesses. 

The share of “natural” gas in U.S. electricity generation has risen dramatically in the last X years. Today, it comprises around 42% of our electricity generation, up from only 18% in 2005. Starting in the aughts, natural gas quickly displaced coal as a key pillar of our energy system. New technology in the form of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling (aka “fracking”) made it cheaper than coal, and it emits less CO2 than coal when burned. This magic combination of cheaper and ostensibly cleaner energy made natural gas the darling of both Presidents Bush and Obama.

Lost in the sauce?
Explainers & Glossary of Terms

Investor-Owned Monopolies – Most utility companies are what’s known as “Investor-Owned Utilities” or IOUs. These utility companies are privately owned, so they have a mandate to maximize shareholder value – aka be profitable. They also have a monopoly in their geographic service area. While the monopoly is practical (imagine the chaos and inefficiency of a dozen companies simultaneously trying to operate their natural gas systems), it also means utility companies need to be regulated to ensure they don’t abuse it.

PUCs – And that’s why we have Public Utility Commissions. Most PUCs have 5 commissioners, who are either appointed by the governor or elected by the public. These commissioners are the most powerful energy regulators that you’ve probably never heard of. 

Regulatory scope – Their regulatory scope covers electric and gas utilities, and in some states, water and/or telecommunications utilities. When it comes to regulating fugitive methane, all PUCs have authority over the distribution pipelines, since they regulate the gas utilities that own these pipelines. Many PUCs also have some authority over transmission and gathering pipelines, but the scope and extent varies by state.

PUCs have a full suite of regulatory tools at their disposal, including the following common ones that you may hear get tossed around:

  • Rate Cases: When the PUC approves or denies a utility company’s request to raise their customer’s bills, or “rates.” Because of the CapEx Bias, utilities often propose rate increases to pay for new infrastructure – including unnecessarily pipeline replacements. But the PUC gets to judge whether the new rates are “just and reasonable” – which is where we have influence. You don’t have to be an expert to say you don’t want your bills to skyrocket. 

  • Integrated Resource Planning (IRP): The strategic planning meeting between PUCs and utility company. The IRP maps out the utility’s plans to meet future energy demand in a cost-effective, safe way. At worst, the IRP process is just the PUC rubber-stamping a utility's plan to build, build, build to maximize their profits. At best, it’s a chance for the PUC to critically inspect the utility’s practices and set them on the right course. 

  • Rulemakings: Ad-hoc proceedings where Public Utility Commissions make or update regulations for various aspects of utility operations. It’s a catch-all process where advocates can push for rules that prioritize affordability and safety.

Methane movie time!

Let’s be honest; we all loved the substitute teacher who just *put on a movie* instead of that long division worksheet. Be your own substitute teacher today! Sit back, relax, and have a laugh. The Climate Town team will bring you up to speed.

Watch this: Natural Gas Is Scamming America | Climate Town

** Disclaimer: This video focuses on the rise of natural gas and the problem of fugitive methane… in general. It does not include much on the solution: asking PUCs to tamp down on leaks. You’ll have to read this Issue Briefing to learn that! Specifically, this section.

You made it to the end and are more than equipped to take action!