21 State AGs, Led by WV, Will Challenge SEC Climate Regulations

The attorneys general for 21 U.S. states (nearly half!), led by the successful and victorious West Virginia Attorney General, Patrick Morrisey, are challenging the proposed regulations the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is attempting to ram down the throats of publicly traded companies (see SEC Votes to Force Public Companies to Disclose Mythical GHG Risks). Morrisey, you may recall, was victorious in the lawsuit he led against the federal Environmental Protection Agency (see West Virginia Wins Supreme Court Case Against EPA re Power Plants). Morrisey believes he can produce a second court win–against the SEC. God speed!
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Morningstar provides what it calls “independent” research, ratings, and tools to help people invest. One of the so-called ratings is Morningstar’s environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing ratings for companies. The ESG measurement is a clever way of steering investors (investors representing big funds worth billions of dollars) away from investing in fossil energy companies. Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt and the AGs from 18 other states (19 AGs in all) have launched an investigation into Morningstar’s ESG rating system that “plays politics with pensions and real people’s livelihoods.”
Seneca Resources, a 100% subsidiary and the drilling arm of National Fuel Gas Company, announced on Tuesday that the company has achieved an “A” certification grade under the MiQ Standard for Methane Emissions Performance (MiQ Standard), the highest available certification level MiQ awards, for all of the company’s 1+ billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of natural gas production in the Marcellus/Utica. Seneca can now claim it produces responsible gas and the molecules can be traded/bundled on the MiQ Digital Registry.
A company called Strive, an Ohio-based asset management firm formed with the backing of two billionaires–Bill Ackman and Peter Thiel–is on a mission to educate and influence companies away from ESG obsession. In July, we told you about Strive and that the company, a counterweight to woke lefty funds like BlackRock, had already raised $20 million (see
PennEnergy Resources LLC, which according to the Pittsburgh Business Times is the 11th largest shale driller in Pennsylvania (with 405 active shale wells), achieved responsibly sourced natural gas certification from Project Canary on nearly all of its wells in January of this year (see
Range Resources, the very first company to sink a Marcellus Shale well back in 2004, issued its annual 2021-2022 Corporate Sustainability Report yesterday. “Sustainability” is Range’s terminology for ESG, or environmental, social, and governance. A couple of notable observations in this latest report: (1) Range has doubled its methane monitoring inspection system using LDAR from four times a year to eight times a year; and (2) Range has the lowest methane intensity, or percentage of methane emissions, in the entire Appalachian basin–according to a third party evaluator.
The crazies are getting crazier–if such a thing is possible. The Kool-Aid drinkers–those who are so brainwashed into the climate cult they refuse to think for themselves–are now demanding “real zero” carbon emissions. They say companies like Amazon and Google and Apple and other Big Green leftist idols who have pledged to be “net zero” carbon emissions by such and such a date are hiding. Those companies are actually still belching out CO2 by the megaton but claim they’re “green” by using nonsensical net zero pledges. Companies that pretend to be net zero use carbon offsets “over there” in order to keep belching out carbon “over here.” Now the crackpots are demanding total, worldwide “real zero” carbon emissions–the end of society as we know it.
Sometimes it’s hard not to despair when you see big investment firms aggressively trying to defund oil and gas companies (see 
All six Big Banks (and investment firms) on the West Virginia blacklist of companies pressuring investors to avoid fossil energy companies are objecting to being included on the WV blacklist. One month ago WV State Treasurer Riley Moore sent a letter to six big banks/investment firms alerting them they are about to be added to the state’s “blacklist” for violating policies by not investing or doing business with fossil fuel companies (see
Shippers (drillers, utility companies, others that buy and sell natural gas) are now free to buy and sell producer certified gas (PCG), or responsibly sourced gas (RSG), at all pooling points across the Tennessee Gas Pipeline (TGP) system. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) approved the TGP pooling plan after previously rejecting the plan. FERC decided the pooling plan is precisely what we said it was–a marketing thing–and not an endorsement by FERC of whether or not the methane flowing with that designation meets certain environmental criteria.
In March the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), corrupted by the Bidenistas, said it will begin to force all publicly traded companies to disclose their so-called greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and the imaginary climate risks their businesses face (see
Among the speakers who addressed the conference delegates at Hart Energy’s DUG East conference on Tuesday was Chesapeake Energy COO Josh Viets. He traced the roots of the current energy crisis back to decisions and events some 20 years ago. Viets said, “Access to energy correlates to quality of life, and the industry has a responsibility to work to provide energy that is affordable, reliable and low-carbon.” Europe, said Viet, dropped the ball beginning 20 years ago by buying into the hype about so-called renewable energy and forsaking fossil fuel development, while the U.S. invested in fracking and fossil fuels, leading to our energy independence under Donald J. Trump.