The Borneo Post

Methane leaks offset much of the benefits of natural gas – Study

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THE US oil and gas industry emits 13 million metric tons of methane from its operations each year - nearly 60 per cent more than current estimates and enough to offset much of the climate benefits of burning natural gas instead of coal, according to a study published on Thursday in the journal Science.

The higher volumes of natural gas leaking from across the industry’s supply chain would be enough to fuel 10 million homes and would be worth an estimated US$ 2 billion, the researcher­s said.

The study, led by Environmen­tal Defence Fund researcher­s and including 19 co- authors from 15 institutio­ns, estimated that the current leak rate from US oil and gas operations is 2.3 per cent, significan­tly higher than the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s current estimate of 1.4 per cent.

While the percentage­s seem small, methane is a potent greenhouse gas and the additional emissions would erase the climate advantages of burning natural gas instead of coal during the period when methane’s effects on the climate are most pronounced.

Though half of methane vanishes in 8.3 years, EDF says it is still 84 times as powerful as carbon dioxide over 20 years. The EPA uses a broader time frame and says methane’s global warming effect is 28 to 36 times that of carbon dioxide over the course of a century.

“Natural gas losses are a waste of a limited natural resource, increase global levels of surface ozone pollution, and significan­tly erode the potential climate benefits of natural gas use,” the study’s authors wrote.

They added that the climate effects of emitting 13 million metric tons of methane over 20 years “roughly equals” the carbon dioxide emissions from all US coal-fi red power plants operating in 2015. It would equal about 31 per cent of the carbon dioxide emissions from US coal plants over a 100-year time horizon.

“In the short term, the climate impacts of burning coal in a modern plant vs natural gas in a modern plant are similar as a result of the supply chain methane emissions,” Fred Krupp, president of the Environmen­tal Defence Fund, said in an email. But, he added, “over the long term the climate impacts of using gas to generate electricit­y will be significan­tly less than those of using coal even with high methane emissions.”

Moreover, he added, “if methane emissions were reduced, which they can be easily, it could deliver significan­t short term climate benefits as well.”

The study, which relied largely on companies willing to cooperate, cautioned that its estimates could be too low. It said that the worst actors were most likely to opt out of taking part in the study. In addition, the study has not updated measuremen­ts of local distributi­on systems, which could be emitting substantia­l volumes as well.

The Science study said one possible explanatio­n for the gap between its estimates and

Natural gas losses are a waste of a limited natural resource, increase global levels of surface ozone pollution, and significan­tly erode the potential climate benefits of natural gas use. Study’s authors

EPA’s might be that EPA did not adequately count emissions in abnormal conditions. The Science study used an extensive aerial infrared camera survey of about 8,000 production sites in seven US oil and natural gas basins and found that about 4 per cent of surveyed sites had one or more observable plumes, with two to seven times the methane emissions from average sites.

The study said that the industry could take steps to lower the level of methane emissions. It recommende­d that companies install less failurepro­ne systems, carry out onsite leak surveys, re- engineer individual components and processes, and deploy sensors at individual facilities and on towers, aircraft or satellites.

“Scientists have uncovered a huge problem, but also an enormous opportunit­y,” EDF chief scientist Steven Hamburg, a co- author of the study, said in a statement. “Reducing methane emissions from the oil and gas sector is the fastest, most costeffect­ive way we have to slow the rate of warming today, even as the larger transition to lowercarbo­n energy continues.”

The study takes an important step in measuring methane leaks, especially from natural operations.

Last October, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said “methane is a potent greenhouse gas and the uncertaint­y over the level of methane emitted to the atmosphere raises questions about the extent of the climate benefits that gas can bring.”

It said, “One critical question is the extent to which methane emissions along the gas value chain negate the climate advantages of gas.”

But the IEA also estimated that 40 to 50 per cent of current methane emissions could be avoided at no net cost. — WPBlooombe­rg

 ??  ?? Researcher­s used a variety of techniques, on the ground and from the air, to detect methane emissions at oil and gas facilities across the country.m — Environmen­tal Defence Fund photo
Researcher­s used a variety of techniques, on the ground and from the air, to detect methane emissions at oil and gas facilities across the country.m — Environmen­tal Defence Fund photo

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