EPA Greenlights Compressor Stations Despite Eco Protests in Colorado
Published Date: 3/12/2026
Notice
Summary
The EPA said no to requests from an environmental group that wanted to block air permits for Terra Energy’s Mamm Creek and Bailey Compressor Stations in Colorado. This means the stations can keep operating under their current permits, with no new costs or changes for now. If anyone wants to challenge this decision, they have until May 11, 2026, to take it to court.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
Colorado Compressor Permits Upheld
The EPA Administrator issued an order dated December 10, 2025 denying petitions (filed May 30, 2025) that sought to object to Title V operating permit nos. 07OPGA293 and 09OPGA339. Those permits apply to Terra Energy Partners' Mamm Creek and Bailey Compressor Stations in Silt, Garfield County, Colorado, and remain in effect after the EPA order.
May 11, 2026 Court-Review Deadline
Under Sections 307(b) and 505(b)(2) of the Clean Air Act, anyone seeking judicial review of portions of the EPA order that denied issues in the petition must file a petition for review in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the appropriate circuit no later than May 11, 2026.
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Previous / Next Documents
Previous: 2026-04843 — Clean Air Act Operating Permit Program; Order on Petitions for Objection to State Operating Permits for Rocky Mountain Midstream, LLC's Latham, Mustang, Auburn, and West Brighton Compressor Stations
The EPA said no to challenges against air pollution permits for Rocky Mountain Midstream’s four compressor stations in Colorado. This means the stations can keep operating under their current permits, with no new costs or changes for now. If anyone wants to fight this decision, they have until May 11, 2026, to take it to court.
Next: 2026-04845 — Clean Air Act Operating Permit Program; Order on Petition for Objection to State Operating Permit for Laramie Energy, LLC-Conn Creek Compressor Station
The EPA said no to a request from an environmental group to block a pollution permit for Laramie Energy’s Conn Creek Compressor Station in Colorado. This means the company can keep operating under the current permit, with no new costs or changes for now. If anyone wants to challenge this decision, they have until May 11, 2026, to take it to court.
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