Colorado oil, gas groups express concerns about bill

March 18, 2019
Two oil and gas groups jointly expressed concern that a Colorado Senate bill was moving ahead before getting the necessary public input. SB 19-181 was scheduled for consideration by a Senate committee a day after Senate Majority Leader Stephen Fenburg (D-Denver) introduced it on Mar. 1, the Colorado Oil & Gas Association and Colorado Petroleum Council’s leaders noted.

Two oil and gas groups jointly expressed concern that a Colorado Senate bill was moving ahead before getting the necessary public input. SB 19-181 was scheduled for consideration by a Senate committee a day after Senate Majority Leader Stephen Fenburg (D-Denver) introduced it on Mar. 1, the Colorado Oil & Gas Association and Colorado Petroleum Council’s leaders noted.

“It would impact the livelihoods of Coloradans across the state, including many who live in rural areas and may not be able to make it to the Capitol to testify on such short notice,” COGA Pres. Dan Haley and CPC Executive Director Tracee Bentley said.

“Our elected leaders can’t be asked to vote on a bill this complicated and this encompassing—and one with such grave impacts—without first a legitimate dialogue,” they said.

The Senate Transportation and Energy Committee approved the bill in a 4-3 vote on Mar. 5 along party lines and referred it to the Finance Committee, Bentley told OGJ.

SB 19-181 “enhances local governments’ ability to protect public health, safety, and welfare and the environment by clarifying, reinforcing, and establishing their regulatory authority over the surface impacts of oil and gas development,” it said.

In a Mar. 6 note, analysts at Moody’s Investors Service said the bill proposes sweeping changes not just to oil and gas regulation in Colorado but also to the Colorado Oil & Gas Conservation Commission (COGCC). This would have negative impacts on the credit of oil and gas operators in the state by raising regulatory risks and possibly impeding production growth and heightening the compliance and operational costs for companies in the DJ basin, they said.

It would give COGCC greater authority to regulate the oil and gas industry while increasing regulated operational requirements, making “forced pooling” (a form of eminent domain) more difficult and granting local governments the flexibility to set their own drilling rules, including setback limits, the minimum distance of production activity from certain, mostly inhabited, areas, the Moody’s analysis said.

“SB 19-181 also proposes big changes to the COGCC itself, requiring that just one of the nine commissioners have industry experience, down from three today, while changing the agency’s mission to regulating the hydrocarbon industry, instead of fostering its development,” they noted.

The measure came months after Colorado voters resoundingly defeated an initiative that would have established even farther setback limits.