(a) oil and fossil gas exploration and production, and fossil gas gathering and processing; (b) inactive wells, temporarily plugged wells and permanently plugged and abandoned wells; (c) natural gas transmission and distribution, excluding metering systems at final consumption points and the parts of service lines between the distribution network and the metering system located on the property of final customers, as well as underground storage and operations in LNG facilities; and (d) active underground coal mines and surface coal mines, closed underground coal mines and abandoned underground coal mines.
Regulation (EU) 2024/1787 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 June 2024 on the reduction of methane emissions in the energy sector and amending Regulation (EU) 2019/942 (Text with EEA relevance)
(1) "methane emissions" means all direct emissions from any component, whether they result from venting, incomplete combustion from flaring, or from leaks; (2) "component" means any part or element of equipment used in oil, natural gas or coal installations or infrastructure, that has the potential to emit methane; (3) "operator" means any natural or legal person who operates or controls an asset, or, where provided for under national law, to whom decisive economic power over the technical functioning of an asset has been delegated; (4) "asset" means a business or operating unit, which can be composed of several facilities or sites, including operated assets and non-operated assets; (5) "operated assets" means assets which are under the operational control of the operator; (6) "non-operated assets" means assets which are not under the operational control of the operator; (7) "site" means a collection of components with some relation to one another as a subdivision of an asset; (8) "transmission" means transmission as defined in Article 2, point (17), of Directive (EU) 2024/1788 of the European Parliament and of the Council ;Directive (EU) 2024/1788 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 June 2024 on common rules for the internal markets for renewable gas and natural gas and for hydrogen, amending Directive (EU) 2023/1791 and repealing Directive 2009/73/EC (OJ L, 2024/1788, 15.7.2024, ELI: http://data.europa.eu/eli/dir/2024/1788/oj ).(9) "transmission system operator" means transmission system operator as defined in Article 2, point (18), of Directive (EU) 2024/1788; (10) "distribution" means distribution as defined in Article 2, point (19), of Directive (EU) 2024/1788; (11) "distribution system operator" means distribution system operator as defined in Article 2, point (20), of Directive (EU) 2024/1788; (12) "mine operator" means any natural or legal person who operates or controls a coal mine or, where provided for under national law, to whom decisive economic power over the technical functioning of a coal mine has been delegated; (13) "verification" means the activities carried out by a verifier to assess the conformity with this Regulation of the reports transmitted by the operators, undertakings and mine operators pursuant to this Regulation; (14) "verifier" means a legal person who carries out verification activities and who is, at the time a verification statement is issued, accredited by a national accreditation body pursuant to Regulation (EC) No 765/2008, or, without prejudice to Article 5(2) of that Regulation, a natural person otherwise authorised to carry out verification activities; (15) "source" means a component or a geological structure that releases methane into the atmosphere whether intentionally or unintentionally, intermittently or persistently; (16) "emission factor" means a coefficient that quantifies the emissions of a gas per unit of activity, which is based either on a sample of measurement data or other quantification methods, averaged to develop a representative rate of emission for a given activity level under a given set of operating conditions; (17) "generic emission factor" means a standardised emission factor for each type of emission source which is derived from inventories or databases, but in any case not verified by means of direct measurements; (18) "specific emission factor" means an emission factor for a type of emission source which is derived from direct measurements; (19) "direct measurement" means measurement of the methane emissions at source-level with a measuring device which allows such a measurement; (20) "quantification" means activities to determine the quantity of methane emissions by means of direct measurements or, where direct measurements are not feasible, based on other methods such as simulation tools, and other detailed engineering calculations or a combination of such methods; (21) "site-level methane emissions" means all sources of methane emissions within a site; (22) "site-level measurement" means a measurement which captures a complete overview of all site-level methane emissions, including, for a pipeline network, emissions from segments of such a network, and typically involves the use of sensors mounted on a mobile platform, such as a vehicle, a drone, an aircraft, a boat or a satellite, or the use of other means, such as fixed sensors or continuous point sensor networks; (23) "undertaking" means a natural or legal person who carries out at least one of the following activities: oil or fossil gas exploration and production, fossil gas gathering and processing, or gas transmission, distribution and underground storage, including with regard to LNG; (24) "LNG facility" means an LNG facility as defined in Article 2, point (33), of Directive (EU) 2024/1788; (25) "leak detection and repair survey" or "LDAR survey" means a survey to identify and detect sources of methane leaks and other unintentional methane emissions, and to repair or replace the relevant components; (26) "type 1 leak detection and repair survey" or "type 1 LDAR survey" means a leak detection and repair survey carried out in accordance with the requirements set out under Article 14(2), (7) and (8) and Part 1 of Annex I for type 1 LDAR surveys; (27) "type 2 leak detection and repair survey" or "type 2 LDAR survey" means a leak detection and repair survey carried out in accordance with the requirements set out under Article 14(2), (7) and (8) and Part 1 of Annex I for type 2 LDAR surveys; (28) "production location" means a location where oil or natural gas is extracted from the ground and where no processing takes place; (29) "processing location" means a location where processes, such as the separation of oil and natural gas from water, are used to treat oil and natural gas; (30) "shutdown" means a situation where a site or part of its components no longer operates under normal operating conditions and is shut down, and where complete or partial pressure reduction is required before repair or maintenance works can be initiated; (31) "venting" means the direct release of uncombusted methane into the atmosphere; (32) "flaring" means the disposal of methane by controlled combustion, in a device designed for that purpose; (33) "routine flaring" means flaring during the normal production of oil or fossil gas, in the absence of adequate facilities or amenable geology to re-inject methane, utilise it on-site or dispatch it to a market, and excludes flaring caused by an emergency or a malfunction; (34) "flare stack" means a device equipped with a pilot burner used for flaring; (35) "emergency" means a temporary, unexpected, infrequent situation in which methane emissions are unavoidable and necessary to prevent an imminent and substantial adverse impact on human safety, health or the environment, and excludes situations arising from or related to the following events: (a) failure by the operator to install appropriate equipment of sufficient capacity for the expected or actual rate and pressure of production; (b) failure of the operator to limit production where the production rate exceeds the capacity of the related equipment or gathering system, except where the excess production is due to a downstream emergency, malfunction or unscheduled repair, and lasts for no longer than 8 hours from the time of notification of the downstream capacity issue; (c) scheduled maintenance; (d) operator negligence; (e) repeated failures, namely four or more failures within the preceding 30 days, of the same piece of equipment;
(36) "malfunction" means a sudden, unavoidable failure or breakdown of equipment beyond the reasonable control of the operator which substantially disrupts operations but does not constitute an equipment failure or breakdown caused entirely or in part by poor maintenance or negligent operation, or by another preventable cause; (37) "destruction and removal efficiency" means the mass percentage of methane that is destroyed or removed after combustion has ceased relative to the quantity of methane entering the flare stack; (38) "inactive well" means an exploration or production oil or gas well or well site, onshore or offshore, in which, for at least 1 year, no operations for exploration or production have taken place, with the exception of temporarily plugged wells and permanently plugged and abandoned wells; (39) "temporarily plugged well" means an exploration or production oil or gas well or well site, onshore or offshore, where well barriers have been installed to temporarily isolate the producing reservoir and where access to the well is still provided for; (40) "permanently plugged and abandoned well" means an exploration or production oil or gas well or well site, onshore or offshore, which has been plugged and will not be re-entered, in which all operations have been terminated and in which all installations associated with the well have been removed in accordance with the applicable regulatory requirements, and where documentation can be provided as established in Part 1, point 3, of Annex V; (41) "remediating" means the process of cleaning up contaminated water and soil; (42) "reclaiming" means the process of returning an oil or gas well or well site to having soil and vegetation conditions similar to those that existed before it was disturbed; (43) "coal mine" means a site where coal mining occurs or has occurred, including lands, excavations, underground passageways, shafts, slopes, tunnels and workings, structures, facilities, equipment, machines and tools situated on the surface or underground and used in, or resulting from the work of extracting lignite, subbituminous coal, bituminous coal or anthracite from its natural deposits in the earth by any means and by any method, and includes the work of preparing the coal for extraction; (44) "active coal mine" means a coal mine, the majority of the revenue of which comes from extracting lignite, subbituminous coal, bituminous coal or anthracites, and where at least one of the following conditions apply: (a) mine development is underway; (b) coal has been produced within the last 90 days; (c) mine ventilation fans are in operation;
(45) "underground coal mine" means a coal mine where coal is produced by tunnelling into the earth to the coalbed, where the coal is then mined with underground coal mining equipment such as cutting machines and continuous, longwall and shortwall mining machines and transported to the surface; (46) "surface coal mine" means a coal mine where coal lies near the surface and can be extracted by removing the covering layers of rock and soil; (47) "ventilation shaft" means a vertical passage used to move fresh air underground or to remove methane and other gases from an underground coal mine; (48) "drainage station" means a station which collects methane from a coal mine gas drainage system; (49) "drainage system" means a system which may comprise multiple methane sources and which drains methane-rich gas from coal seams or surrounding rock strata and transports it to a drainage station; (50) "post-mining activities" means activities carried out after coal has been mined and transported to the surface, including coal handling, processing, storage and transport; (51) "continuous measurement" means a measurement where the reading is taken at least every minute; (52) "coal deposit" means an area containing significant concentrations and minable quantities of coal, defined according to the Member State’s methodology on documenting geological mineral deposits; (53) "closed coal mine" means a coal mine where coal production has ceased, which is closed in accordance with the applicable licensing requirements or other arrangements, and for which an operator, owner or licensee has still a valid permit, licence or other legal document conferring responsibility for the coal mine; (54) "abandoned coal mine" means a coal mine where coal production has ceased but for which no operator, owner or licensee can be identified as being subject to the obligations under a valid permit, licence or any other legal document conferring responsibility for the coal mine, or that has not been closed in a regulated manner; (55) "alternative use of an abandoned underground coal mine" means the use of the subsurface mine infrastructure and coal mining equipment for purposes other than coal production; (56) "coal mining equipment" means any equipment that remains linked to the methane-bearing strata, such as gob vents and drainage pipes; (57) "coking coal mine" means a coal mine where at least 50 % of the production output averaged over the last 3 available years is coking coal, as defined in Annex B to Regulation (EC) No 1099/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council ;Regulation (EC) No 1099/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 October 2008 on energy statistics (OJ L 304, 14.11.2008, p. 1 ).(58) "producer" means an undertaking which, in the course of a commercial activity, produces crude oil, natural gas or coal, by extracting it from the ground in a licensed area, processing it or conveying it through connected infrastructure within that licensed area; (59) "importer" means a natural or legal person who, in the course of a commercial activity, places crude oil, natural gas or coal originating from a third country on the Union market, including any natural or legal person established in the Union appointed to carry out acts and formalities required under Chapter 5; (60) "exporter" means the contractual counterparty to the importer in each contract concluded for the supply of crude oil, natural gas or coal into the Union; (61) "methane performance profile" means the individual information and datasheets for Member States, third countries and, as applicable, Union producers or importers, as well as third-country producers or exporters supplying crude oil, natural gas or coal to the Union or placing crude oil, natural gas or coal on the Union market, as applicable, which are published in the methane transparency database; (62) "super-emitting event" means an event occurring within or outside the Union where a source or a set of closely connected sources in a site emits above 100 kg of methane per hour; (63) "reconciliation process" means the investigation and explanation of the reasons for any statistically significant discrepancies between source-level quantification and site-level measurement of methane emissions.
(a) investigate substantiated complaints referred to in Article 7 and occurrences of non-compliance as soon as possible after the date on which the competent authorities have become aware of such complaints or non-compliance and no later than 10 months after that date; (b) ensure, where deemed relevant by the competent authorities, that leak repairs or replacements of components were carried out in accordance with Article 14 and that mitigation measures were implemented in accordance with Articles 18, 22 and 26; (c) ensure compliance where a derogation has been granted under Article 14(5); (d) verify, where deemed relevant by the competent authorities, compliance by undertakings and importers with this Regulation.
(a) the choice and employment of emission factors; (b) the methodologies, calculations, samplings or statistical distributions leading to the determination of methane emissions; (c) any risk of inappropriate measuring or reporting; (d) any quality control or quality assurance systems applied by the operators, undertakings, mine operators or importers.
(a) aggregation of methane emissions data in accordance with appropriate statistical methods; (b) verification and validation of methodologies and statistical processes used by the industry to quantify methane emissions data; (c) development of data aggregation and analysis methodologies in accordance with scientific and statistical good practice to ensure a higher level of accuracy of methane emission estimates, with appropriate characterisation of the uncertainty; (d) publication of aggregated reported data by core source and by level of reporting, classified by, where available, operated and non-operated assets, in compliance with competition and confidentiality requirements; (e) reporting of findings on major discrepancies between data sources contributing to build more robust scientific methodologies; (f) reporting of super-emitting events identified by way of an early detection and warning system.
(a) for operated assets, by 5 February 2026 ; and(b) for non-operated assets, by 5 February 2027 , where those assets have not been reported under point (a).
(a) for operated assets, by 5 February 2027 and by 31 May every year thereafter; and(b) for non-operated assets, by 5 August 2028 and by 31 May every year thereafter, where those assets have not been reported under point (a).
(a) type and location of the emission sources; (b) detailed data for each type of emission source, reported in tonnes of methane and in tonnes of CO 2 equivalent, using global warming potentials as defined in the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC);(c) detailed information on the quantification methodologies; (d) all methane emissions for operated assets; (e) share of ownership and methane emissions from non-operated assets multiplied by the share of ownership; (f) a list of the entities with operational control of the non-operated assets.
(a) notify without delay the competent authorities before the end of the reporting period; (b) carry out a reconciliation process as soon as possible and inform the competent authority about the results of the reconciliation process, including any evidence and supporting documents as necessary, no later than the next reporting period.
(a) for aboveground and underground components, excluding distribution and transmission networks, in accordance with the minimum frequencies set out in Part 1, point 1, of Annex I; (b) for components of distribution and transmission networks, in accordance with the minimum frequencies set out in Part 1, point 2, of Annex I; (c) for all offshore components, in accordance with the minimum frequencies set out in Part 1, point 3, of Annex I; (d) for all other components, in accordance with the minimum frequencies set out in Part 1, point 4, of Annex I.
(a) the competent authorities approve their use in the context of the LDAR programme; (b) the measurement is undertaken at the level of each individual potential emission source; and (c) the advanced detection technologies comply with the requirements set out in paragraphs 7 and 8 and are in accordance with the requirements set out in Part 2 of Annex I.
(a) for all components at processing locations, type 1 LDAR surveys are carried out at least every 12 months; (b) for at least 25 % of all components at processing locations, type 2 LDAR surveys are carried out every 12 months, with all components being checked at least every 48 months; (c) for all components at production locations, type 1 LDAR surveys are carried out at least every 36 months; (d) for all components at production locations, type 2 LDAR surveys are carried out at least every 60 months.
(a) at a level as close as possible to each individual potential emission source for aboveground components and components above the sea level; (b) at the interface between ground and atmosphere for underground components as a first step and, where a leak is detected as specified in the implementing act adopted in accordance with paragraph 7, as close as possible to the emission source as a second step; (c) applying the best detection techniques that are commercially available for offshore components below the sea level or below the seabed.
(a) the minimum detection limits and detection techniques to be employed for the different detection devices used for meeting the requirements for all components in paragraph 8; (b) the thresholds applicable to the first step of the LDAR surveys to be used for meeting the requirements for underground components in paragraph 8.
(a) for type 1 LDAR surveys: 7000 parts per million in volume of methane or 17 grams per hour of methane;(b) for type 2 LDAR surveys: (i) 500 parts per million in volume of methane or 1 gram per hour of methane for aboveground components and for offshore components above the sea level; (ii) 1000 parts per million in volume of methane or 5 grams per hour of methane for the second step of LDAR surveys of underground components;(iii) 7000 parts per million in volume of methane or 17 grams per hour for offshore components below the sea level or below the seabed.
(a) the safety of personnel and other persons in proximity to the detected leak; (b) any adverse environmental impact if the operator can demonstrate that that impact would be greater than the environmental benefits, for example where a repair could lead to a higher overall level of methane emissions than would be the case in the absence of the repair; (c) accessibility of a component, including scheduled maintenance, permitting process requirements or required administrative authorisation; (d) unavailability of replacement parts necessary for the repair of the component or of replacement components; and (e) significant deterioration of the gas supply situation likely to lead to a crisis level as referred to in Article 11(1) of Regulation (EU) 2017/1938 of the European Parliament and of the Council .Regulation (EU) 2017/1938 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2017 concerning measures to safeguard the security of gas supply and repealing Regulation (EU) No 994/2010 (OJ L 280, 28.10.2017, p. 1 ).
(a) at levels of methane equal to or higher than the thresholds set out in paragraph 8 at standard temperature and pressure during a previous LDAR survey, immediately after the repair carried out pursuant to paragraph 9 and no later than 45 days thereafter, to ensure that the repair was successful; and (b) at levels of methane lower than the thresholds set out in paragraph 8 at standard temperature and pressure, no later than 3 months from the date on which the emissions were detected, to check at least once whether the size of methane loss has changed and whether a repair is necessary.
(a) during normal operations of pneumatic devices, compressors, atmospheric pressure storage tanks, sampling and measuring devices and dry gas seals, or other components designed to vent, provided that such equipment meets the standards or technical prescriptions established under Article 32 and is properly maintained to minimise methane losses; (b) to unload or clean-up liquid holdup in a well to atmospheric pressure; (c) during gauging or sampling a storage tank or other low-pressure vessel, provided that the tank or vessel meets the standards or technical prescriptions established under Article 32; (d) during transferring liquids from a storage tank or other low-pressure vessel to a transport vehicle provided that the tank or vessel meets the standards or technical prescriptions established under Article 32; (e) during repair, maintenance, test procedures and decommissioning, including blowing down and depressurising equipment to carry out repair and maintenance; (f) during a bradenhead test; (g) during a packer leakage test; (h) during a production test lasting less than 24 hours; (i) where methane does not meet the gathering pipeline specifications, provided that the operator analyses methane samples twice per week to determine whether the specifications have been achieved and routes the methane into a gathering pipeline as soon as the pipeline specifications are met; (j) during commissioning of pipelines, equipment or facilities, only for as long as necessary to purge introduced impurities from the pipeline or equipment; (k) during pigging, blow-down to repair, decommissioning or purging a pipeline for repair or maintenance, and only where the gas cannot be contained or redirected into an unaffected portion of the pipeline.
(a) caused by an emergency or a malfunction; or (b) lasting a total of 8 hours or more within a 24-hour period from a single event.
(a) by 5 August 2025 , at least 20 % of those wells are included in the inventory with priority being given to inactive wells and temporary plugged wells;(b) by 5 August 2026 , at least 40 % of those wells are included in the inventory;(c) every 12 months after 5 August 2026 , at least an additional 15 % of those wells are included in the inventory;(d) all wells are included into the inventory by 5 August 2030 .
(a) remediating, reclaiming and permanently plugging wells; (b) reclaiming related access roads or the surrounding soil under water, as applicable; (c) restoring land, water, seabed and habitat impacted by wells and the prior operations; (d) monitoring to ensure plugged wells are not a source of methane emissions in accordance with this Article.
(a) methane emissions from all ventilation shafts in use by the mine operator; (b) methane emissions from drainage stations and from the methane drainage system, whether occurring as a result of intentional or unintentional venting, or incomplete combustion from flaring; (c) methane emissions occurring during post-mining activities and within the area of the coal mine.
(a) methane emissions occurring at the coal mine during the mining process; (b) methane emissions occurring during post-mining activities and within the area of the coal mine.
(a) caused by an emergency or a malfunction, (b) occurring unavoidably, due to maintenance of the drainage system.
(a) methane emissions from all ventilation shafts which continue to emit methane; (b) methane emissions from coal mining equipment the use of which has been discontinued; (c) methane emissions from other well defined point emission sources as specified in Part 1 of Annex VIII.
(a) crude oil, natural gas and coal are subject to independent third party verification equivalent to that set out in Articles 8 and 9 and the producer established in a third country applies: (i) for crude oil and natural gas, monitoring and reporting measures ensuring quantification of methane emissions equivalent to those set out in Article 12 or monitoring and reporting at OGMP 2.0 level 5; (ii) for coal, monitoring and reporting measures equivalent to those set out in Article 20; or
(b) the third country has in place and applies to producers and exporters established in that third country and supplying crude oil, natural gas or coal to the Union market a regulatory framework on monitoring, reporting and verification that is at least equivalent to that applied in the Union; in particular, the third country has demonstrated that those monitoring and reporting requirements ensure at least source- and site-level quantification and regular reporting equivalent to those set out in Article 12, for crude oil and natural gas, and in Article 20, for coal, and that effective verification by an independent third party, equivalent to that set out in Articles 8 and 9, as well as effective supervision and enforcement are in place.
(a) a list of third countries where crude oil, natural gas or coal is produced and from which it is exported to the Union; (b) for each Member State or third country referred in point (a) the following information: (i) whether it has mandatory regulatory measures in place on energy sector methane emissions, covering the measures set out in this Regulation regarding measurement, reporting, verification and mitigation of methane emissions in the energy sector, in particular restrictions on venting and flaring; (ii) whether it has signed the Paris Agreement adopted under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and whether it has joined the Global Methane Pledge; (iii) whether it submits national inventory reports in accordance with the requirements of the UNFCCC, where applicable; (iv) whether the national inventory reports submitted pursuant to the UNFCCC include tier 3 reporting of methane emissions in the energy sector, where applicable, and specifying the categories of methane emissions reported at tier 3; (v) the amount of methane emissions in the energy sector specified in the national inventory reports submitted pursuant to the UNFCCC, where applicable, and whether that data was subject to independent verification; (vi) where available, electronic links to national data sources with information on methane emissions in the energy sector;
(c) for each Member State, a list of importers placing crude oil, natural gas or coal on the Union market; (d) for each third country referred to in point (a) the following information: (i) a list of producers or exporters of crude oil, natural gas or coal into the Union, as applicable, and whether they are part of any global initiatives for the reduction of methane emissions, such as the OGMP and the Zero Routine Flaring Initiative; (ii) indicative values estimating the methane emissions related to the transport of crude oil, natural gas and coal.
(a) methane emissions related to crude oil, natural gas and coal placed on the Union market and a data quality assessment for reported methane emissions, including the level of OGMP 2.0 reporting, where relevant; (b) an assessment of the efforts undertaken to monitor, report and reduce methane emissions by Union producers or importers, as well as by third-country producers or exporters, placing crude oil, natural gas or coal on the Union market, including by region where relevant; (c) analysis of super-emitting events that occurred in Member States or in third countries from which the Union imports crude oil, natural gas or coal and how those events were addressed.
(a) measurement and quantification of methane emissions as referred to in Article 12(5); (b) LDAR surveys as referred to in Article 14(1); (c) equipment as referred to in Article 15(3) and (5); (d) quantification of methane emissions as referred to in Article 18(3); and (e) measurement and quantification of methane emissions as referred to in Article 20(4) and Article 25(2).
(a) measurement and quantification of methane emissions as referred to in Article 12(5); (b) LDAR surveys as referred to in Article 14(1); (c) equipment as referred to in Article 15(3) and (5); (d) quantification of methane emissions as referred to in Article 18(3); and (e) measurement and quantification of methane emissions as referred to in Article 20(4) and Article 25(2).
(a) the request has not been accepted; (b) the requested standards have not been delivered within the set deadline; (c) the standards developed by the European standardisation organisations do not comply with the request; or (d) the standards developed by the European standardisation organisation are considered to be insufficient to cover the requirements of this Regulation, in full or in part.
(a) fines proportionate to the environmental damage and impact on human safety and health, set at a level which: (i) at least deprives those responsible of the economic benefits derived from the infringement in an effective way; and (ii) gradually increases for repeated serious infringements;
(b) periodic penalty payments to compel operators, undertakings, mine operators or importers to put an end to an infringement, comply with a decision ordering remedial actions or corrective measures, provide information or submit to an inspection, as applicable.
(a) adopt a decision requiring the person to bring the infringement to an end; (b) order the confiscation of the profits gained or losses avoided due to the infringements insofar as they can be determined; (c) issue public warnings or notices; (d) adopt a decision imposing periodic penalty payments; (e) adopt a decision imposing administrative fines.
(a) failure of operators, undertakings, mine operators or importers to provide the competent authorities or the verifiers with the assistance necessary for the performance of their tasks in accordance with this Regulation; (b) failure of operators or mine operators to carry out the actions set out in the inspection reports referred to in Article 6(5) and (6); (c) failure of operators or mine operators to submit the methane emissions reports as required by Article 12, Article 18(3), Article 20 and Article 25(6), including the verification statement issued by an independent verifier in accordance with Article 8(4); (d) failure of operators to submit a LDAR programme in accordance with Article 14(1) or carry out a LDAR survey in accordance with Article 14(2), (5) and (6); (e) failure of operators to repair or replace components, to continuously survey components and to record leaks in accordance with Article 14(8) to (13); (f) failure of operators to submit a report in accordance with Article 14(14); (g) venting or flaring, including routine flaring, by operators or mine operators, except in the situations provided for in Article 15(2) and (3), Article 22(1) and (2), and Article 26(2); (h) failure of operators or mine operators to demonstrate the necessity to use venting instead of flaring and to demonstrate the necessity to use flaring instead of re-injection, utilisation on-site, storage for later use or dispatch of methane to a market, in the case of operators, or utilisation or mitigation, in the case of mine operators, in accordance with Article 15(4) and (6), Article 22(1) and (2), and Article 26(2); (i) failure of operators to replace or use venting equipment in accordance with Article 15(5) and (7); (j) failure of operators or mine operators to notify or report on venting events and flaring events in accordance with Article 16, Article 23(1) or Article 26, as applicable; (k) use of flare stacks or combustion devices in breach of the requirements laid down in Articles 17, 22 and 23; (l) failure of the responsible party to apply mitigation measures in accordance with Article 18(6) and (9); (m) failure of importers to provide the information required in accordance with Article 27(1) and Annex IX; (n) failure of importers to provide the information required in accordance with Article 28(1) and (2); (o) failure of Union producers or importers to provide the information required in accordance with Article 29(1) and (2); (p) failure of Union producers or importers to comply with the maximum methane intensity values set out in the delegated acts adopted in accordance with Article 29(6).
(a) the duration or temporal effects, the nature and the gravity of the infringement; (b) any action taken by the operator, undertaking, mine operator or importer to timely mitigate or remedy the damage; (c) the intentional or negligent character of the infringement; (d) any previous or repeated infringements by the operator, undertaking, mine operator or importer; (e) the economic benefits gained or losses avoided, directly or indirectly, by the operator, undertaking, mine operator or importer due to the infringement, if the relevant data are available; (f) the size of the operator, undertaking, mine operator or importer; (g) the degree of cooperation with the authorities; (h) the manner in which the infringement became known to the authorities, in particular whether, and if so to what extent, the operator, undertaking, mine operator or importer timely notified the infringement; (i) any other aggravating or mitigating factor applicable to the circumstances of the case, including third party actions.
(a) the effectiveness and efficiency of this Regulation in establishing transparent and accurate measurement, reporting and verification rules and in reducing methane emissions associated with the production of crude oil, natural gas and coal placed on the Union market; (b) if feasible, the achieved level of reduction of methane emissions associated with the production of crude oil, natural gas and coal placed on the Union market as a result of this Regulation; (c) whether additional or alternative measures are necessary to foster and accelerate the reduction of methane emissions in the value chain of crude oil, natural gas and coal placed on the Union market to support the Union’s target of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 and its commitments under the Paris Agreement.
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Type of LDAR survey | Type of component | Frequency |
---|---|---|
Type 1 LDAR survey | 4 months | |
Valve station | 9 months | |
Type 2 LDAR survey | 8 months | |
Valve station | 18 months |
Type of LDAR survey | Type of material | Frequency |
---|---|---|
Type 1 LDAR survey | 3 months | |
6 months | ||
9 months | ||
15 months | ||
Type 2 LDAR survey | 6 months | |
12 months | ||
18 months | ||
Protected steel | 30 months |
Type of LDAR survey | Type of component | Frequency |
---|---|---|
4 months | ||
Valve station | 9 months | |
8 months | ||
Valve station | 18 months | |
Regulating and metering station | 9 months | |
Valve station | 21 months |
Type of LDAR survey | Type of material | Frequency of survey |
---|---|---|
3 months | ||
6 months | ||
12 months | ||
24 months | ||
6 months | ||
12 months | ||
24 months | ||
36 months | ||
6 months | ||
12 months | ||
24 months | ||
36 months |
Type of LDAR survey | Type of component | Frequency |
---|---|---|
Type 1 LDAR survey | Offshore components above the sea level | 12 months |
Offshore components below the sea level | 24 months | |
Offshore components below the seabed | 36 months | |
Type 2 LDAR survey | Offshore components above the sea level | 24 months |
1. manufacturer information about the device; 2. information about the leak detection capabilities, reliability and limitations of the device, including, but not limited to, the ability to identify specific leaks or locations, detection limits and any restrictions on use, as well as supporting data; 3. a description of where, when and how the device will be used.
(1) inventory and identification of all components that have been checked; (2) results of the inspection in terms of whether a methane loss has been detected and, if so, the size of the loss; (3) for components found in a LDAR survey to be emitting at or above the thresholds set out in Article 14(8), an indication of whether repair or replacement was undertaken during the LDAR survey and if not why, taking into account the elements that can justify a delayed repair or replacement, as referred to in Article 14(9), and repair schedule indicating the date of repair or replacement; (4) for components found to be emitting below the thresholds set out in Article 14(8) in a previous LDAR survey, but found to be emitting at or above such thresholds during post-LDAR monitoring, to check whether the size of loss of methane has changed, an indication whether repair or replacement was undertaken immediately and if not, why not, taking into account the elements that can justify a delayed repair or replacement, as referred to in Article 14(9), and the repair schedule indicating the date of repair or replacement.
(1) inventory and identification of all components that have been checked; (2) results of the inspection in terms of whether a methane loss has been detected and, if so, the size of the loss; (3) for components found to be emitting at or above the thresholds set out in Article 14(8) in a previous LDAR survey, information about the repair or replacement undertaken and results of post-repair monitoring to check if the repair or replacement was successful; (4) for components found to be emitting below the thresholds set out in Article 14(8) in a previous LDAR survey, results of post-LDAR monitoring to check whether the size of loss of methane has evolved and recommendations on the basis of those results.
(1) name of the operator; (2) location, name and type of asset; (3) equipment involved; (4) date(s) and time(s) when the event was discovered or started and terminated; (5) quantification of the volume of vented or flared methane; (6) destruction and removal efficiency by design level and type of flare stack or other combustion device used; (7) cause and nature of the event; (8) measures taken to limit the duration and magnitude of the event; (9) corrective actions taken to eliminate the cause and recurrence of such events; (10) results of inspections to take place once every 2 weeks of flare stacks or other combustion devices and of the remote or automated monitoring systems, as applicable, carried out in accordance with Article 17, in particular, where an irregularity has been identified; (11) decision to replace venting equipment and replacement schedule, where applicable.
(1) in the case of lit flare stacks or other combustion devices: whether combustion is considered adequate or inadequate; (2) in the case of unlit flare stacks or other combustion devices: whether the unlit flare has a gas vent or not; where the flare stack or other combustion device is equipped with a remote or automated monitoring system, methane emissions shall be calculated on the basis of the flow rate and uncombusted methane in case there is a gas vent.
(a) name and address of the operator, owner or licensee, as applicable; (b) name, type and location of the well or well site, specifying whether it is an inactive well, temporarily plugged well or permanently plugged and abandoned well; (c) where feasible, map showing the borders of the well or well site; (d) results of quantification of methane emissions to air and to water carried out.
(a) dates for initial drilling and last operation; (b) orientation (vertical, horizontal and slant); (c) overall depth of the well; (d) whether any notable events have occurred during the drilling process, such as "kicks"; (e) whether the well has contacted gas containing significant amounts of sulphur compounds (sour gas), or trace amounts of sulphur compounds (sweet gas); (f) seismic data available for the well in the upper 1000 m of its trajectory with a radius of1000 metres;(g) the most recent well integrity assessment report; (h) whether the well is an exploration or production well; (i) whether the well has contacted any shallow gas pockets, shallow gas zones or loss circulation zones; (j) whether the well is located onshore (indicate urban, rural or other) or offshore (indicate water depth); (k) in the case of offshore wells, information regarding any conditions at the seabed which could assist methane migration up through the water column; (l) information on the well’s lifecycle status (active, inactive, downhole plugged, surface decommissioned etc.); (m) whether the well cap associated with a decommissioned well is vented.
(a) the last known measurements or quantification of methane emissions to air and to water, if any; (b) information showing that the relevant competent authority has attested that the well or well site in question meets the criteria set out in Article 2, point (40); (c) documentation that is adequate to demonstrate that there are no methane emissions from the well or well site, including emission factor based or sample-based quantification or reliable evidence of permanent subsurface isolation in accordance with ISO 16530-1:2017 standard: (i) for all wells permanently plugged and abandoned on or after 3 August 1994 ;(ii) where available, for all wells permanently plugged and abandoned before 3 August 1994 .
(1) the schedule of addressing each inactive well and temporarily plugged well, including the actions to be carried out; (2) name and address of the operator, owner or licensee of the inactive well or temporarily plugged well, as applicable; (3) projected end date of remediation, reclamation or plugging of inactive wells and temporarily plugged wells.
(1) name and address of the mine operator; (2) address of the coal mine; (3) tonnage of each coal type produced by the coal mine; (4) for all ventilation shafts utilised by the coal mine: (a) name (if any); (b) period of use, if different from the reporting period; (c) coordinates; (d) purpose (intake, exhaust); (e) technical specifications of the measurement equipment used for the measurement and quantification of methane emissions and optimum operating conditions specified by the manufacturer; (f) proportion of time when continuous measurement equipment was operating; (g) reference to the applicable standards or technical prescriptions for: methane measurement equipment sampling position, measurement of flow rates, measurement of methane concentrations;
(h) methane emissions registered by the continuous measurement equipment (in tonnes); (i) methane emissions registered through monthly sampling (in tonnes/hour), including information on: sampling date, sampling technique, readings of atmospheric conditions (pressure, temperature, humidity), taken at an appropriate distance to reflect the conditions in which continuous measurement equipment is operating;
(j) where the coal mine is joined to another coal mine by any means allowing for a flux of air between the coal mines, name of that coal mine;
(5) post-mining emission factors and description of the method used for their calculation; (6) post-mining emissions (in tonnes).
(1) name and address of the mine operator; (2) address of the coal mine; (3) tonnage of each coal type produced by the coal mine; (4) map of all deposits used by the coal mine, outlining the borders of those deposits; (5) for each coal deposit: (a) name (if any); (b) period of use, if different from the reporting period; (c) outline of the experimental method used to determine methane emissions due to mining activities, including the choice of methodology to account for methane emissions from surrounding strata;
(6) post-mining emission factors and description of the method used for their calculation; (7) post-mining emissions.
(1) name and address of the mine operator; (2) tonnage of methane transported by a mine or mines drainage system, per mine; (3) tonnage of vented methane; (4) tonnage of flared methane; (5) destruction and removal efficiency by design level of the flare stack or other combustion device; (6) use of captured methane.
(1) name and address of the drainage station operator; (2) time when the event was detected; (3) cause of the event; (4) justification for using venting instead of flaring, if applicable; (5) tonnage of vented or flared methane, or an estimate if quantification is not possible.
1.1. name and address of the operator, owner or licensee, as applicable; 1.2. address of the site; 1.3. map showing the borders of the coal mine; 1.4. schemes of the coal mine workings and their status; 1.5. results of source-level direct methane measurement or quantification at the following point emission sources: (a) all shafts used by the coal mine when active, accompanied by: (i) shaft coordinates; (ii) shaft name (if any); (iii) sealing status and sealing method, if known;
(b) unused vent pipes; (c) unused gas drainage wells; (d) other recorded potential point emission sources.
2.1. measurements shall be taken at atmospheric pressure allowing for potential methane leaks to be detected, and in accordance with the appropriate scientific standards; 2.2. measurements shall be taken using equipment with an accuracy of at least 0,5 tonnes per year;2.3. measurements shall be accompanied by information on: (a) date of the measurement; (b) atmospheric pressure; (c) technical details of the equipment used for the measurement;
2.4. ventilation shafts historically used by two or more coal mines shall be assigned to just one coal mine in order to avoid double-counting.
1. name and address of the operator, owner or licensee, as applicable; 2. address of the site; 3. methane emissions from all point emission sources outlined in Part 1, including: (a) type of point emission source; (b) technical details of the measurement equipment and method used to estimate methane emissions, including sensitivity; (c) proportion of time when the measurement equipment was operating; (d) methane concentration registered by the measurement equipment; (e) estimates of methane emissions from the point emission source.
1.1. a list of all point emission sources referred to in Part 1; 1.2. technical feasibility of mitigation of methane emissions at site level, based on point emission sources; 1.3. timeline of mitigation of methane emissions from each site; 1.4. assessment of the efficiency of projects for collection of methane from an abandoned coal mine, where implemented.
(1) name and address of the exporter and, if different from the exporter, name and address of the producer; (2) exporting third countries and regions, as classified in the Union nomenclature of territorial units for statistics (NUTS) level 1, where the products were produced, and countries and regions, as classified in the NUTS level 1, through which the products were transported before they were placed on the Union market; (3) as regards crude oil and natural gas, information whether the producer or the exporter, as applicable, is carrying out source- and site-level measurement and quantification, whether that data are subject to independent third-party verification, whether its methane emissions are reported, either independently or as part of commitments to report national greenhouse gas inventories in line with UNFCCC requirements, and whether they are in compliance with UNFCCC reporting requirements or with OGMP 2.0 standards; a copy of the latest report on methane emissions, including, where available, the information referred to in Article 12(4), where provided in such report; and the method of quantification (such as UNFCCC tiers or OGMP 2.0 levels) used in the report for each type of methane emission; (4) as regards crude oil and natural gas, information whether the producer or the exporter, as applicable, applies regulatory or voluntary measures to control its methane emissions, including measures such as LDAR surveys or measures to control and restrict venting events and flaring events, including a description of those measures, together with, where available, relevant reports from LDAR surveys and from venting events and flaring events with respect to the last available calendar year; (5) as regards coal, information whether the producer or the exporter, as applicable, carries out source-level methane emissions measurement and quantification, whether those methane emissions are calculated and quantified in accordance with Annex VI, whether that data are subject to independent third-party verification, whether its methane emissions are reported, either independently or as part of commitments to report national greenhouse gas inventories in line with UNFCCC requirements, and whether they are in compliance with UNFCCC reporting requirements or in compliance with a European or other international standard for monitoring, reporting and verification of methane emissions; a copy of the latest report on methane emissions, including, where available the information referred to in Article 20(6); and the method of quantification (such as UNFCCC tiers) used in the report for each type of methane emission; (6) as regards coal, whether the producer or the exporter applies regulatory or voluntary measures to control its methane emissions, including measures to control and restrict venting events and flaring events; and, where available, the volumes of vented and flared methane calculated for each coal mine at least during the last calendar year and the existing mitigation plans for each coal mine, together with a description of those measures, including, where available, reports from venting events and flaring events with respect to the last available calendar year; (7) name of the entity that carried out the independent third-party verification of the reports referred to in points (3) and (5), if any; (8) information under Article 28(1) or (2), as applicable, showing that the crude oil, natural gas or coal is subject to monitoring, reporting and verification measures at producer level that are equivalent to those set out in this Regulation for contracts concluded or renewed on or after 4 August 2024 and information on the efforts undertaken to ensure that crude oil, natural gas or coal supplied under contracts concluded before4 August 2024 is subject to monitoring, reporting and verification measures at producer level that are equivalent to those set out in this Regulation;(9) information whether the model clauses referred to in Article 28(3) are used in the supply contracts, specifying which model clauses; (10) information under Article 29(1) on the methane intensity of the production of crude oil, natural gas and coal placed on the Union market under the relevant supply contracts.