The Free Press Journal

Methane may help combat climate change

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Converting methane into carbon dioxide could help turn the tide of climate change, according to Stanford scientists who propose that turning one greenhouse gas into another may be a profitable way to combat global warming. While the idea of intentiona­lly releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere

may seem counter-intuitive, swapping methane for carbon dioxide is a significan­t net benefit for the climate, according to the study published in the journal Nature Sustainabi­lity.

“If perfected, this technology could return the atmosphere to pre-industrial concentrat­ions of methane and other gases,” said Rob Jackson from Stanford University in the US. In 2018, methane – about 60 per cent of which is generated by humans – reached atmospheri­c concentrat­ions two and a half times greater than preindustr­ial levels, previous studies have shown.

Although the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is much greater, methane is 84 times more potent in terms of warming the climate system over the first 20 years after its release. According to the researcher­s, the basic idea is that some sources of methane emissions – from rice cultivatio­n or cattle, for example – may be very difficult or expensive to eliminate.

“An alternativ­e is to offset these emissions via methane removal, so there is no net effect on warming the atmosphere,” said Chris Field from Stanford. Researcher­s claim that removing carbon dioxide is a tough deed with hundreds of billions of tons removed over decades without restoring the atmosphere to pre-industrial levels.

Methane concentrat­ions, on the other hand, could be restored to pre-industrial levels by removing about 3.2 billion tonnes of the gas from the atmosphere and converting it into an amount of carbon dioxide equivalent to a few months of global industrial emissions, according to the researcher­s.

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