From his home office in
Arizona, Riley Duren was multitasking, telling me about frighteningly
powerful greenhouse gases even as he monitored his team’s aircraft.
The plane was flying at 20,000 feet to measure methane spewing from
wells in the
Permian Basin of Texas. An aerial map on his computer screen
brought the measurements to life: Dozens of red zones represented
otherwise invisible plumes of methane above oil and gas fields.
“It’s just like watching a
firework show. They’re just popping up all over the place,” said Duren,
a University of Arizona scientist who leads the nonprofit Carbon
Mapper, which has public and private partners including NASA, the
state of California, and the company Planet.
In the public conversation
about climate change, methane has gotten too little attention for too
long. Many people may be unaware that humans have been spewing a
greenhouse gas that’s even more potent than carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere at a rate not seen in at least 800,000 years. It harms air
quality and comes from sources as varied as oil and gas pipelines to
landfills and cows. But methane and other greenhouse gases, including
hydroflurocarbons, ozone, nitrogen dioxides, and sulfur oxides,
are finally getting the attention they deserve — thanks largely to
advances in the science.
Until the past few years,
methane’s relative obscurity made sense. Carbon dioxide (CO2) is by
far the largest contributor to climate change, and it comes from
recognizable fossil fuel sources such as car tailpipes, coal
smokestacks, and burning gas and oil. The most troubling part is that
it sticks around in the atmosphere for hundreds of years, making
climate change not just a problem for us now, but generations well
into the future. Carbon is now embedded in our language, from “carbon
footprint” to “zero-carbon lifestyle.”
A landmark new report from the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a UN panel of top climate
scientists, marks the first time the global body devotes substantial
attention to the major role of gases other than CO2. Its sixth
assessment of the science of climate change, which finds that the
evidence of man-made warming is “unequivocal” and many climate
impacts will be irreversible, dedicates a full chapter of the report
to “short-lived pollutants” such as methane. One of their most common
sources is fossil fuels.
NOAA data shows rising methane
concentrations in the atmosphere, and the drastic cuts needed starting
in the 2020s if there’s any hope of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees
Celsius. UN Global Methane Assessment, 2021
Since these gases are such a
tiny part of the atmosphere, compared to how much carbon we’re pumping
in the air, methane is “always number two” in discussions of climate
change, said Drew Shindell, who chaired the world’s first United
Nations
Global Methane Assessment released this year. It’s fallen “between
the cracks” in global research thus far, Shindell says.
Methane has literally fallen
between the cracks: Some of it leaks out of the ground in places like
oil fields and permafrost, and scientists are still trying to
understand where it all comes from. The IPCC report reflects these
uncertainties. The chapter authors, for example, do not name the
dominant source of human-caused methane emissions, whether fossil
fuels or agriculture. But what we now know represents one of the
greatest evolutions in climate research since the last IPCC assessment
came out in 2013. The work ofscientists like Duren
helps the world understand the biggest culprits of the methane crisis,
in hopes that governments and corporations take urgent action.
Even though methane is not
nearly as well understood as carbon, it’s playing an enormous role in
the climate crisis. It’s at least 80 times as effective at trapping
heat than carbon in a 20-year period, but starts to dissipate in the
atmosphere in a matter of years. If this is the
“decisive decade” to take action, as the Biden administration has
said, then a methane strategy has to be at the center of any policy
for tackling global warming.
Methane could mean the
difference between a rapidly warming planet changing too quickly and
drastically for humanity to handle, and buying the planet some
much-needed time to get a handle on the longer-term problem of fossil
fuels and carbon pollution.
Methane pollution erases
gains from switching off of coal
Shindell, one of the
scientists who raised an early alarm about methane, was studying air
pollution in the late 2000s when he found a strange trend.
Ground-level ozone, the pollutant that forms hazy smog, was rising in
the US — which surprised him after decades of progress under the Clean
Air Act. He realized the “relentless growth in methane,” which
accelerates the formation of ozone near the ground, was to blame. Ever
since, he’s been trying to warn the world not to overlook this
dangerous pollutant and its costs to both the climate and human
health.
Identifying the millions of
sources of methane around the globe isn’t so simple. Cattle release
methane, and so does decomposing organic material. All the food waste
that goes into landfills release methane. And natural gas is almost
entirely methane.
If you’ve heard politicians
call natural gas a “bridge fuel,” what they mean is that natural gas
emits less carbon dioxide than coal. It’s wrong to call it clean,
because burning methane still releases carbon — and methane that
escapes without burning is a powerful warmer.
A climate report released Monday by the United Nation’s
(UN) Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), predicts that
unless humans make immediate changes to limit methane emissions,
carbon dioxides and other heat trapping gases, the earth will continue
to warm with devastating effects on human and animal life.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
The oil and gas industry has
argued that it isn’t to blame for methane pollution, but advocates and
scientists have shown otherwise. Environmental Defense Fund, which has
commissioned flights to monitor methane over Texas oil and gas fields,
has found that oil fields in the US are leaking
60 percent more methane than the Environmental Protection Agency
estimates. University of Michigan scientist Eric Kort found methane
spewing from offshore wells at far
higher rates than
previously understood. The environmental group Earthworks, using
expensive, on-the-ground camera equipment, helped track down some
sites that were repeat offenders of venting methane into the
atmosphere.
The scientific papers have
mounted: Since 2013, at least
45 scientific papers have highlighted the disproportionate role of
oil and gas operations, according to a review by the advocacy group
Climate Nexus. Scientists like Duren have also produced vivid images
of methane that a layperson can understand, just like the imagery
below from April this year.
According to Duren, Carbon
Mapper has detected over 3,000 methane plumes in the Permian Basin
with its airborne surveys, all coming from a range of oil and gas
infrastructure, including wells, tank batteries, compressor stations,
pipelines, and more.
Together, these findings
suggest a grim outlook for the minimal progress made so far in
tackling carbon pollution: Rising methane pollution effectively erases
some of the progress the US has made by cleaning up the coal-fired
power sector.
The IPCC report noted that
methane has been rapidly climbing since 2007, driven by a mix of
agriculture (from East and West Asia, Brazil, and northern Africa) and
fossil fuels, specifically from North America. In other words,
scientists are confident that humans are the main cause of increasing
methane pollution.
Still, the data needs to get
better. The Trump administration scrapped early rules that would’ve
required oil companies to monitor and fix their own leaks. Few major
economies even measure methane. China has launched a
carbon-trading market to tackle carbon emissions, but has done
less to
control methane, which comes not just from gas but coal as well.
Scientists know a lot about
CO2 — and much less about other gases
There are other greenhouse
gases out there besides CO2 and methane. Nitrogen dioxides, black
carbon, and halogenated gases (a category that includes chemicals used
for refrigerants, hydrofluorocarbons) are other contributors to
climate change.
A graphic from the IPCC’s
summary for policymakers makes sense of how all these gases interact
to add up to at least 1.1 degrees Celsius of average global warming
since the 1850s. As the below graphic shows, CO2 and methane make up
most of the warming, but other pollutants leave their mark too. Some
aerosols from fossil fuels, like sulfur dioxide, actually have a
cooling effect (but are dangerous to our lungs).
Other pollutants besides carbon have a heating effect on
the atmosphere. IPCC AR6 Summary for Policymakers
There’s good news and bad
news when it comes to the second-worst cause of global warming.
First the bad: Methane is
rising, and there’s plenty we don’t know about it. Even if we
pinpointed the worst offenders in oil and gas, its other sources would
still require sweeping societal change, like a reduction in the number
of cows raised for food. (There’s been some experimentation with
feed for cattle to reduce methane, or more wackily,
fart-collecting
backpacks for cows).
Food waste, which releases
methane as it decomposes, is a problem too. Across the world, the
richest economies are throwing out
half their food. Landfills may be able to capture
some of the methane, but that too is an energy-intensive process.
Even though methane is not nearly as well-understood as
carbon, it’s playing an enormous role in the climate crisis.
Patricia Monteiro/Bloomberg via Getty Images
That leaves oil, coal, and
gas. Coal is the worst offender; it leaches both carbon as well as
methane, making it the number one priority to phase out. Oil
production is a big problem too, in part because producers don’t face
much regulatory or economic pressure to recapture the extra gas. Even
when industry is trying to capture and sell natural gas, producers
lose methane throughout its extraction and transportation. It leaks
out as producers pipe the gas to compressor stations, process it for
shipment, ship it hundreds of miles by pipeline to a refinery, and
transport it to the consumer in the form of liquefied natural gas,
plastic, petrochemicals, or the gas that lights up ovens in homes and
apartments.
The whole system is extremely
leaky, but the leakiest parts are not totally clear. “It’s just been
really hard to put our finger on exactly the source, and be able to
attribute it to the granularity that would enable us to solve it,”
said Fran Reuland, a researcher on methane in the oil and gas industry
at the think tank RMI. “Because it’s happening over such a large area,
wrapping your mind around just how much is coming out is one of the
main problems.”
Another frustrating challenge
is that methane emissions fluctuate. Carbon Mapper pieced together a
time series of a section of the Permian Basin in the southwestern US,
in which the dots corresponding with methane emissions. About half the
time, Duren estimates, some of the worst offenders may be venting
methane directly into the atmosphere to relieve pressure, while the
other half probably represent persistent leaks and malfunctions.
Environmentalists argue we
must transition off coal, gas, and oil as quickly as possible — but
stopping the pollution can’t wait for the transition to play out. A
coalition of
134 environmental and health groups have rallied around a certain
target — cutting 65 percent of the oil and gas industry’s methane
pollution by 2025 — and have pressured the Biden administration to
adopt the same goal by using existing technology.
The gains from containing
methane will be critical as the world continues to gamble with its
climate. A study from EDF scientists published in the peer-reviewed
journal
Environmental Research Letters found that tackling methane
emissions across multiple sectors, including oil and gas, agriculture,
and landfills, can slow the current rate of runaway warming by a
staggering 30 percent. One-quarter of one degree Celsius by 2050 might
not sound like a lot, but small changes to global averages contain a
range of extreme impacts
that will worsen across the globe.
There’s the good news: The
world doesn’t need to wait around for better science. Action is
feasible now.
Estimates of methane’s biggest sources from human activity
around the world. In North America, the biggest source is fossil
fuels.
UN Global Methane Assessment, 2021
Here’s what can be done
about methane emissions now
When the IPCC report came out
on August 9, Lisa DeVille, a member of the Dakota Resource Council who
lives on the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation, was encouraged to hear
scientists “echoing what most of us can see with our own eyes,” based
on what she sees on the front lines of oil production in North Dakota.
“The land near my home is
crisscrossed with oil and gas pipelines, literally littered with
drilling rigs,” DeVille said in a call with reporters. She said her
home has been ravaged by unusually high rainfall and flooding, and she
and her husband have had to breathe in smoke from wildfires. “I live
less than a mile away from well pads that vent and flare methane and
choke our atmosphere, making local people like my husband and I sick.
This means the land that is part of my identity as an Indigenous women
has been turned into a pollution-filled industrial zone.”
Under pressure from climate
advocates, the Environmental Protection Agency is expected to pass a
new set of rules in September. Environmentalists have pushed for high
targets, and hope these rules will require oil and gas companies to
both monitor and address methane leaks from existing and future wells,
using sensors and regular equipment checks. The Biden administration
has suggested that methane regulation offers “near-term solutions” to
climate change.
There’s widespread agreement,
even from some in the
fossil fuel industry, that the place to start is tackling leaks.
This will get easier as scientists gather better data about where
methane is leaking. From the industry’s perspective, companies are
losing product and dollars. For activists, plugging leaks is one step
on the road to permanently phasing out gas.
The problem that underlies
all of climate action is that humanity has to trade short-term profit
for the long-term costs. Carbon pollution affects the world for the
long haul, and methane is making the crisis significantly worse in the
near term.
On the plus side, tackling
methane and other dangerous pollutants would have an “immediate
payoff,” said Global Methane Assessment’s Shindell. It could change
our dangerous climate trajectory over the next 30 years.
“Every action counts,” said
Jane Lubchenco, a senior science adviser to the Biden administration,
in an interview with Vox. “Every avoided tenth of a degree matters.”
Fractions of degrees could
translate into wild swings in extreme weather, or tipping points we
don’t even fully understand. In the effort to prevent climate
catastrophe, methane will count tremendously.
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
Spokane, Washington. 99212 509 995 1879
Cell, Pacific Time Zone. General
office: 509-254
6854
4501 East
Trent Ave.
Spokane, WA 99212