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Satellite data reveals landfills emit high levels of methane

- By Sibi Arasu

BENGALURU, India — Landfills are releasing large amounts of planet-warming methane into the atmosphere from the decomposit­ion of waste and are a significan­t contributo­r to such emissions in urban areas, a study suggests.

Scientists used satellite data from Delhi and Mumbai in India, Lahore in Pakistan and Buenos Aires in Argentina, and identified specific locations in each city that persistent­ly emit high methane levels, all of which were landfills. The cities’ overall methane emissions from all sources were 1.4 to 2.6 times higher than previous estimates.

The study, published in Science Advances last week, is aimed at helping local government­s’ efforts to limit global warming by pinpointin­g specific sites of major concern.

When organic waste such as food, wood or paper decomposes, it emits methane. Landfills are the third-largest source of methane emissions globally, after oil and gas systems and agricultur­e.

Although methane only accounts for about 11% of greenhouse gas emissions and lasts about a dozen years in the air, it traps 80 times more heat in the atmosphere than carbon dioxide does. Scientists estimate that at least 25% of today’s warming is driven by methane from human actions.

“This is the first time that high-resolution satellite images have been used to observe landfills and calculate their methane emissions,” said Joannes Maasakkers, lead author of the study and atmospheri­c scientist at the Netherland­s Institute for Space Research.

“We found that these landfills, which are relatively small compared to city sizes, are responsibl­e for a large fraction of total emissions from a given area,” he said.

Satellite data to detect emissions is still a relatively new field, but it’s being used more and more to observe gases across the world. It means more independen­t organizati­ons are tracking greenhouse gases and identifyin­g big emitters, whereas previously local government figures were the only source available.

“This new work shows just how important it is to manage landfills better, especially in countries like India where landfills are often on fire, emitting a wide range of damaging pollutants,” said Euan Nisbet, an Earth scientist at Royal Holloway, University of London, who wasn’t part of the study.

Earlier this year, smoke hung over New Delhi for days after a massive landfill caught fire as the country was sweltering in an extreme heat wave with temperatur­es surpassing 122 degrees. At least two other landfill fires have been reported in India this year.

Nisbet added that the newer satellite technology, combined with on-theground measuremen­ts, makes it easier for researcher­s to identify “who is polluting the world.”

China and India are the world’s top methane polluters, a recent Internatio­nal Energy Agency analysis found.

 ?? MANISH SWARUP/AP ?? A fire burns on April 27 at the Bhalswa landfill in New Delhi. A study suggests that landfills are releasing far more planet-warming methane than previously thought.
MANISH SWARUP/AP A fire burns on April 27 at the Bhalswa landfill in New Delhi. A study suggests that landfills are releasing far more planet-warming methane than previously thought.

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