Current:Home > ScamsIn U.S. Methane Hot Spot, Researchers Pinpoint Sources of 250 Leaks -GrowthInsight
In U.S. Methane Hot Spot, Researchers Pinpoint Sources of 250 Leaks
View
Date:2025-04-13 10:56:27
Methane is escaping from more than 250 different oil and gas wells, storage tanks, pipelines, coal mines and other fossil fuel facilities across the Four Corners region of the U.S. Southwest, according to a study published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The findings help solve a puzzle that had preoccupied the study’s researchers since 2014. That year, they published research that flagged the region as one of the country’s largest sources of methane emissions, but they couldn’t determine the exact sources of the runaway gas.
The difference in this study, the researchers said, is that they used aircraft sensors allowing them to pinpoint the source of leaks within a few feet. The earlier paper relied on less precise, region-wide satellite data.
The research could help industry officials prioritize which leaks to repair first, since more than half the escaping methane came from just 10 percent of the leaks.
“It’s good news, because with the techniques that we have developed here, it’s possible to find the dominant leaks that we can target for methane emissions mitigation,” said lead author Christian Frankenberg, an environmental science and engineering professor at the California Institute of Technology.
Methane is a powerful short-lived climate pollutant that is 84 times more potent over a 20-year period than carbon dioxide. Curbing the release of the gas is a key component of President Obama’s climate plan. The goal is to cut methane emissions from the oil and gas sector, the biggest emitter in the country, by 40-45 percent by 2025.
The Four Corners region, where Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico meet, spans more than 1,000 square miles. It is one of the nation’s largest producers of coal bed methane and releases about 600,000 metric tons of methane into the atmosphere each year. That’s roughly six times the amount of methane that leaked from California’s Aliso Canyon well over several months beginning in late 2015. That event sparked evacuations, outrage and protests, and new regulation.
The study is the latest to show that a small number of “superemitters” mainly from oil and gas operations are responsible for the majority of U.S. methane emissions.
“It would be the rare case that [the superemitter phenomenon] has not been observed,” said Ramón Alvarez, a senior scientist with the Environmental Defense Fund. EDF has played a role in nearly 30 peer-reviewed studies on oil and gas methane emissions, but was not involved with this study.
The key now, according to Alvarez, is to determine whether the same high-emitting leaks persist over time or whether new ones keep cropping up.
“It becomes this kind of whack-a-mole effect,” Alvarez said. “You have to be on the lookout for these sites, and once you find them, you want to fix them as quickly as possible. But you have to keep looking, because next week or next month there could be a different population of sites that are in this abnormally high-emitting state.”
In the new study, for example, researchers detected the biggest leak at a gas processing facility near the airport in Durango, Colo., during one monitoring flight. Subsequent flights, however, failed to detect the same leak, suggesting emissions from the facility were highly sporadic.
If superemitting sites are short-lived and flitting—here one week, there another—constant monitoring and mitigation across the entire oil and gas sector will be required. Airplane-based readings are seen as too expensive for that work.
“We can’t predict ahead of time which facilities will leak,” said Robert Jackson, an earth system science professor at Stanford University who was not involved in the study. “Because we can’t, we need cheap technologies to monitor those facilities for when the leaks or emissions pop up.”
Jackson said recent developments in drone technology and satellites that allow for higher-resolution monitoring show promise.
“I think the time is coming when any person who is interested will be able to monitor not just oil and gas operations but lots of operations for different emissions and pollution,” Jackson said. “I really do think that day will be a good one.”
veryGood! (396)
Related
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Score 50% off Old Navy Jeans All Weekend -- Shop Chic Denim Styles Starting at $17
- How many points did Caitlin Clark score Friday? Lynx snap Fever's five-game win streak
- Score 50% off Old Navy Jeans All Weekend -- Shop Chic Denim Styles Starting at $17
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Stellantis recalls 1.5M Ram trucks to fix software bug that can disable stability control
- Wisconsin health officials recall eggs after a multistate salmonella outbreak
- Negro Leagues legend Bill Greason celebrates 100th birthday: 'Thankful to God'
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Tom Brady's NFL broadcasting career is finally starting. What should fans expect?
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- How many teams make the NFL playoffs? Postseason format for 2024 season
- NASCAR 2024 playoffs at Atlanta: Start time, TV, streaming, lineup for Quaker State 400
- Evacuations ordered as wildfire burns in foothills of national forest east of LA
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- Charles Barkley keeps $1 million promise to New Orleans school after 2 students' feat
- Never-before-seen JFK assassination footage: Motorcade seen speeding to hospital
- Taylor Swift and Brittany Mahomes Debunk Feud Rumors With U.S. Open Double Date
Recommendation
Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
Week 1 fantasy football rankings: PPR, half-PPR and standard leagues
Georgia school shooting highlights fears about classroom cellphone bans
Artem Chigvintsev Makes Subtle Nod to Wife Nikki Garcia After Domestic Violence Arrest
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Kelly Stafford Reveals the Toughest Part of Watching Quarterback Husband Matthew Stafford Play Football
Recreational marijuana sales begin on North Carolina tribal land, drug illegal in state otherwise
Recreational marijuana sales begin on North Carolina tribal land, drug illegal in state otherwise