Colorado could make natural gas a constitutional right

logickkk11 pts0 comments

Colorado Voters Will Decide Whether a ‘Right to Natural Gas’ is Added to the State Constitution - Inside Climate News

Skip to content

Open Menu

Pulitzer Prize-winning, nonpartisan reporting on the biggest crisis facing our planet.

Donate

Trump 2.0: The Reckoning

Donate

Open Menu

Close Menu

Search

Search for:

Science

Politics

Justice & Health

Fossil Fuels

Clean Energy

ICN Local

Projects

Impact

About Us

Newsletters

Podcast

Contact Us

Topics<br>A.I. & Data Centers

Activism

Arctic

Biodiversity & Conservation

Business & Finance

Climate Law & Liability

Climate Treaties

Denial & Misinformation

Environment & Health

Extreme Weather

Food & Agriculture

Fracking

Nuclear

Pipelines

Plastics

Public Lands

Regulation

Super-Pollutants

Water/Drought

Wildfires

Information<br>About

Job Openings

Reporting Network

Whistleblowers

Memberships

Ways to Give

Fellows & Fellowships

Publications<br>E-Books

Documents

A ballot measure written by a conservative nonprofit could amend the Colorado Constitution to enshrine fossil fuel companies’ right to sell methane gas and possibly force communities that have tried to eliminate gas appliances from new construction to back away from those efforts.

Advance Colorado, which wrote the measure and led the effort to gather enough signatures to add the measure to the ballot, submitted its petition on June 25 to put Initiative 177, the “Right to Natural Gas,” to voters in November’s state election.

The broad language of the measure—only 60 words in total—makes it difficult to predict how state agencies would implement it if it passes and many people worry the amendment would endanger Colorado’s ability to reach its climate goals.

The proposed amendment states that “producers and utilities have the right to sell natural gas to homes and businesses.” That could force changes to building codes that encourage electric heating and cooking, undoing progress towards electrification.

Newsletters

We deliver climate news to your inbox like nobody else. Every day or once a week, our original stories and digest of the web’s top headlines deliver the full story, for free.

ICN Weekly

Saturdays

Our #1 newsletter delivers the week’s climate and energy news – our original stories and top headlines from around the web.

Get ICN Weekly

Inside Clean Energy

Thursdays

Dan Gearino’s habit-forming weekly take on how to understand the energy transformation reshaping our world.

Get Inside Clean Energy

Today’s Climate

Tuesdays

A once-a-week digest of the most pressing climate-related news, written by Kiley Price and released every Tuesday.

Get Today’s Climate

Breaking News

Don’t miss a beat. Get a daily email of our original, groundbreaking stories written by our national network of award-winning reporters.

Get Breaking News

Inside Climate Podcast

An inside look at top climate news, delivered every two weeks.

Get Inside Climate Podcast

Justice & Health

A digest of stories on the inequalities that worsen the impacts of climate change on vulnerable communities.

Get Justice & Health

Email Address

I agree to the terms of service and privacy policy.

“Really, it’s just a cynical attempt to lock fossil fuel industry profits into the state constitution,” said Kelly Nordini, CEO of Conservation Colorado, an environmental nonprofit. “That’s bad for people’s pocketbooks, for clean air, for clean water; it has no provisions for public health or safety.”

The ballot measure faced pushback earlier this year from House Democrats and Conservation Colorado. House Democrats proposed a bill that would have preemptively placed protections for public health and safety on the right to natural gas amendment. However, House Republicans ran out the clock on the bill during the final day of the legislative session, preventing it from being introduced.

Conservation Colorado initially filed four ballot initiatives for November’s state election in response to the amendment: three seeking to hold oil and gas companies liable for harm caused by their operations, and one to stop utilities raising rates to pay for natural gas infrastructure expansion. The organization later decided not to pursue these initiatives to focus on opposing the right to natural gas measure.

Advance Colorado did not respond to requests for comment. However, in a report published in April, they argued that “burdensome” regulation places hidden costs on consumers and calls on the state to protect the right to energy choice. The report said that efforts towards decarbonization and electrification—key pillars of the state’s efforts to confront climate change—“would have a devastating impact on Colorado.”

Legislators and industry groups in other states have pursued similar actions to prevent the transition away from domestic methane gas use. From 2020 to 2024, 26 states passed preemptive bans on policies that required the states to transition away from methane gas use. For example, in 2021, Utah enacted a law...

climate colorado right from natural state

Related Articles