“Just when we thought all hope was lost, common sense prevailed today in the United States Congress,” said Jessica Ennis, senior legislative representative with the environmental law organization Earthjustice.

That’s because the Senate on Wednesday failed to pass a Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution that would have killed an Obama-era Bureau of Land Management (BLM) rule that limits methane flaring from fossil fuel production on federal and tribal lands.

“Methane is a potent contributor to climate change, and letting companies simply vent or flare methane in vast quantities from their operations on publicly-owned lands is foolhardy,” explained Jeremy Martin, senior scientist with the Clean Vehicles Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). “That’s why it’s so important that we protect common-sense standards, and why this resolution deserved a ‘no’ vote.”

That vote was 49-51, with three Republicans—Susan Collins of Maine, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, and Jon McCain of Arizona—joining Democrats in voting “no.”

The House already voted to kill the rule, which environmental groups said amounted to “giving away a taxpayer-owned resource for free,” and was thanks to the CRA, “a dirty trick that Congress can use to do the oil industry’s bidding.”

If the resolution had been successful in the Senate, it would have made making fossil fuel companies accountable for their pollution “nearly impossible,” said UCS’s Martin—”not only would it have overturned current rules, it would have blocked future administrations from setting standards.”

SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT