The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hina says it will cut methane pollution

- By Dan Murtaugh

world’s largest emitter methane, said it will boost monitoring, reporting and data transparen­cy to reduce releases of the super-potent greenhouse gas.

The nation will also deploy new technologi­es to spot methane pollution, according to a document released by the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t. While the plan covered strategies to lower emissions from industries such as coal mining, rice farming and gas operations, it did not lay out specific reduction targets.

There was also no mention of the Global Methane Pledge that aims to cut emissions by 30% by the end of this decade from 2020 levels. China declined to join the commitment, led by the U.S. and European Union in 2021, saying it would develop its own pathway. There are now 150 signatorie­s to the pledge, although many major emitters, including Russia, India and Iran, have yet to make commitment­s to cut methane.

Li Shuo, incoming director of the China Climate Hub with the Asia Society Policy Institute, said, “It’s too early to tell if this implies further climate outcomes between the U.S. and China,” but without it “there certainly won’t be further deals.”

The speed and extent of Beijing’s cuts could impact global temperatur­es because methane has more than 80 times the warming power

carbon dioxide during its first 20 years in the atmosphere. Although agricultur­e is the biggest source of the gas from human activity, halting emissions from fossil fuels is seen as easier and cheaper. Scientists have urged government­s to curtail the mostly avoidable releases from coal, oil and gas.

Almost 90% of China’s methane emissions from its energy sector come from coal, which still generates more than half of the country’s electricit­y. Undergroun­d mines release methane when rock strata or coal seams are fractured and operators can capture the gas through abovegroun­d vents. Draining the gas from open-cut mines can also limit methane releases.

The energy sector accounts for 30% to 40% of China’s total methane emission. The national plan calls for actions to reduce leakage and releases from oil and gas plants and to cut the gas’s discharge from coal mining while boosting utilizatio­n rates. China will also work to lower methane emissions from the livestock industry, rice paddies, landfills and sewage treatment plants.

The success of the plan will depend on coordinate­d efforts across government and industry, especially from the powerful energy sector.

Countries are starting to get more serious about slashing avoidable methane emissions from fossil fuel production as the rapidly warming planet forces leaders to focus on solutions that can rein in scorching temperatur­es within decades.

China’s methane emissions from coal mining dwarf those of other nations, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency. The country has greatly increased production in recent years in order to prevent power crunches.

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