Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Methane measuring hurdles slow plan to slash emissions

- By Cathy Bussewitz

NEW YORK — The doors of a metal box slide open, and a drone rises over a gas well in Pennsylvan­ia. Its mission: To find leaks of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, so that energy companies can plug the leaks and reduce the emissions that pollute the air.

The drone is among an array of instrument­s whose purpose is to detect leaks of methane, which scientists say causes roughly 30% of man-made global warming. Along with satellites, ground sensors and planes armed with infrared cameras, drones are part of the backbone of a new federal policy to compel energy companies to record and slash their methane emissions.

The problem is that no one knows when — or even whether — that will be possible. Technology that might allow for precise methane measuremen­ts is still being developed. Under the Biden administra­tion’s Inflation Reduction Act, enacted into law in 2022, companies must start producing precise measuremen­ts of their methane emissions in 2024 and face fines if they exceed permissibl­e levels.

Yet if no one knows how much methane an energy company has emitted, it’s unclear that any fines could be justified.

“They don’t measure the methane because the capability hasn’t been there,” Drew Shindell, a professor of earth science at Duke University, said of regulators. “It’s challengin­g to really go measure all these methane sources.”

Even energy companies that have begun developing systems to reduce their methane emissions are likely years away from being able to make comprehens­ive calculatio­ns Most of them are measuring leaks for only a fraction of their operations.

Satellites, which help connect emissions to a single source, aren’t widely enough available. Groundbase­d sensors and drones require vast amounts of money and time to widely distribute.

Moreover, any agreement on what equipment would be acceptable to measure methane and how it should be used requires a rigorous process involving industry, government and environmen­tal scientists.

“We need to develop these standards, and this can take years, so the process is slow,” said Thomas Lauvaux, a climate scientist at University of Reims in France.

Despite the obstacles, climate scientists and environmen­talists say they still welcome the administra­tion’s effort, under the Inflation Reduction Act, to slash methane emissions. Even if the timeline outlined in the law’s methane reduction program is unrealisti­c, they say, it’s likely to prod companies to accelerate their efforts to reduce leaks.

Under the new law, the EPA can fine companies $900 per ton of methane starting in 2024, rising to $1,500 in 2026. For companies with significan­t leaks, the costs could be substantia­l. Kayrros, a satellite analytics firm, observed a Texas natural gas compressor station that released about 2,000 tons of methane over eight days in 2020. That leak would trigger fines of $1.8 million if it occurred in 2024 or $3 million in 2026.

Most energy companies don’t measure their actual methane emissions. Instead, they estimate based on how much methane they say typically escapes from their equipment.

Scientists have found that those estimates vastly understate the problem. Using data from satellites and aerial surveys, they concluded in peer-reviewed studies that nations and companies are emitting double or triple the methane they’re reporting.

And while scientists count it as progress that energy companies will eventually have to accurately measure emissions of the destructiv­e gas, it seems doubtful that this can be achieved within a year.

“We need many more satellites before we can even pretend that we are tracking,” Lauvaux said.

The companies now gathering emission measuremen­ts from planes, drones, ground sensors or infrared cameras on satellites face a significan­t obstacle: Those efforts are sporadic and cover only a sliver of the vast oil and gas industry.

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN/AP 2021 ?? Flares burn off waste methane and other hydrocarbo­ns at an oil and gas facility in Lenorah, Texas.
DAVID GOLDMAN/AP 2021 Flares burn off waste methane and other hydrocarbo­ns at an oil and gas facility in Lenorah, Texas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States