Strong methane point sources contribute a disproportionate fraction of total emissions across multiple basins in the United States
Understanding, prioritizing, and mitigating methane (CH₄) emissions requires quantifying CH₄ budgets from facility scales to regional scales with the ability to differentiate between source sectors. We deployed a tiered observing system for multiple basins in the United States (San Joaquin Valley, U...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2022-09, Vol.119 (38), p.1-7 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding, prioritizing, and mitigating methane (CH₄) emissions requires quantifying CH₄ budgets from facility scales to regional scales with the ability to differentiate between source sectors. We deployed a tiered observing system for multiple basins in the United States (San Joaquin Valley, Uinta, Denver-Julesburg, Permian, Marcellus). We quantify strong point source emissions (>10 kg CH₄ h−1) using airborne imaging spectrometers, attribute them to sectors, and assess their intermittency with multiple revisits. We compare these point source emissions to total basin CH₄ fluxes derived from inversion of Sentinel-5p satellite CH₄ observations. Across basins, point sources make up on average 40% of the regional flux. We sampled some basins several times across multiple months and years and find a distinct bimodal structure to emission timescales: the total point source budget is split nearly in half by short-lasting and longlasting emission events. With the increasing airborne and satellite observing capabilities planned for the near future, tiered observing systems will more fully quantify and attribute CH₄ emissions from facility to regional scales, which is needed to effectively and efficiently reduce methane emissions. |
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ISSN: | 0027-8424 1091-6490 1091-6490 |
DOI: | 10.1073/pnas.2202338119 |