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Orgo-Life the new way to the future Advertising by AdpathwayAs Europe grapples with spiking energy prices and debates how to strengthen its energy system, one issue has become the wrong target of criticism: methane rules.
The EU Methane Regulation decreases gas waste by requiring fossil fuel companies to monitor, report and reduce methane emissions — the second most potent greenhouse gas after CO2. It is the world’s first binding legislation of its kind, applying not only to domestic producers but also to imported fossil fuels. If fully implemented, it could reduce global methane emissions from the oil and gas sector by more than 30 percent.
This is not only a climate policy. It is also an energy security policy.
Every year, 200 billion cubic meters of fossil gas are wasted through methane leaks and flaring across the global fossil fuel system. That is equivalent to around twice the annual liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports of Qatar. Cutting methane would recover energy that has already been extracted, while preventing it from entering the atmosphere and accelerating the climate crisis.
Every year, 200 billion cubic meters of fossil gas are wasted through methane leaks and flaring across the global fossil fuel system. That is equivalent to around twice the annual liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports of Qatar.

At a time of unprecedented energy price crisis, tackling methane offers one of the fastest and most cost-effective opportunities available to strengthen Europe’s energy security. Yet just as implementation begins, the regulation’s full potential risks going untapped.
A lobbying offensive dressed up as energy security
Since the regulation was negotiated, fossil fuel companies have mounted an intensive lobbying campaign to weaken it — claiming the rules are unworkable, using the EU’s deregulation agenda to reopen the legislation and, more recently, exploiting the energy price crisis to renew their attacks.
Pressures have been amplified by transatlantic lobbying. Through undisclosed meetings with the European Commission and direct political interference, fossil fuel companies from the United States backed by the Trump administration have repeatedly pushed the EU to revise the regulation in order to ease the flow of their LNG at a moment when EU dependence on American gas has reached an unprecedented high.
The arguments these vested interests use misrepresent the impact of methane rules on the EU’s energy system, and the evidence shows they are unfounded.
The claims don’t hold up
The claim that the regulation will reduce energy supplies to Europe rests on a Wood Mackenzie study that assumes non-compliant gas is excluded from the European market. But there is no ban and no exclusion mechanism in the regulation. On the contrary, it provides multiple compliance pathways and transition periods precisely to ensure continued market access while producers adapt. The industry’s modeling rests on a conservative stress-test scenario that serves its own argument, and it does not reflect the reality of Europe’s position as a premium market.
For companies that have enjoyed decades of under-taxed, colossal profits, and are now making millions in windfall profits from the war in Iran, compliance costs are not a credible burden.
The EU is moving toward an overcontracted gas market, with existing LNG contracts projected to exceed future demand. Under the EU’s plan to phase out Russian fossil fuel imports, gas demand is expected to fall by around 7 percent annually through 2030. Analysis by Rystad Energy indicates that global gas supplies capable of meeting the regulation’s monitoring and reporting requirements could amount to roughly twice future EU gas demand by 2027, allowing Europe to prioritize cleaner and less risky sources without compromising energy security. The claim that methane rules will raise costs is equally flawed. Compliance with monitoring, reporting and verification requirements is estimated at just 0.03 and 0.6 percent of production costs, negligible compared with companies’ annual turnover and easily absorbed by industry profit margins. For companies that have enjoyed decades of under-taxed, colossal profits, and are now making millions in windfall profits from the war in Iran, compliance costs are not a credible burden.

Studies show the impact on gas prices would be minimal, especially compared with the volatility routinely triggered by geopolitical shocks. Blaming methane rules for the energy price crisis is a dangerous distraction: high energy prices are driven by Europe’s persistent dependence on fossil fuels and the way gas sets electricity prices.
Industry pressure is not about realistic compliance limits. It is about maintaining business as usual.
A three-year free pass
The real risk today is not methane rules, but the deregulation pressure that is worryingly starting to shape EU policy from within.
A leaked Commission recommendation intended to guide member states on implementing penalties under the regulation considers exempting importers from key obligations for up to three years.
Justified in the name of security of supply risk, such an exemption has little to do with actual energy concerns, given that cargo routing decisions are driven by larger price spreads and shipping costs. Sanctions are proportionate and maximum penalties the last resource for repeated, deliberate noncompliance, not good faith efforts.
The proposed waiver would even apply to basic reporting obligations requiring importers to disclose methane data on the fuels they bring into the EU, obligations that have been in force since August 2024. Importers are not penalized for missing data if they can justify it and show genuine efforts to obtain it. There is no credible energy security case for suspending them.
Allowing those with no genuine stake in Europe’s energy interests to weaken its implementation would be a blow to the EU’s democratic credibility.
At a time of crisis, weakening enforcement would undermine precisely what Europe needs most: energy security and predictability. Markets require clear, predictable rules. Long-term contracts depend on certainty, but exemptions for noncompliance weaken incentives, penalize early movers and risk making compliance optional.
A question of democratic credibility and market power
The reason the pressure on this regulation is so intense is simple: Europe’s rules have real teeth.When EU legislation can shape practices in exporting countries and drive accountability across global supply chains, it demonstrates that Europe’s market power and regulatory leadership still matter. The EU Methane Regulation was adopted with an overwhelming majority, 85 percent of votes in the European Parliament, reflecting broad consensus and strong democratic legitimacy. Allowing those with no genuine stake in Europe’s energy interests to weaken its implementation would be a blow to the EU’s democratic credibility.
Every crisis is an opportunity in disguise, but that opportunity isn’t to surrender to fossil fuel interests, it’s to reduce dependency on imported fossil fuels and accelerate Europe’s energy transition to a more secure and affordable energy system.
Disclaimer
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- The sponsor is Climate Action Network (CAN) Europe asbl/vzw.
- The entity ultimately controlling the sponsor is Climate Action Network (CAN) Europe asbl/vzw.
- This article is linked to the EU Methane Regulation and the importance of safeguarding its implementation including its penalty framework to strengthen EU energy security.
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