Methane leak

A methane leak comes from an industrial facility or pipeline and means a significant natural gas leak: the term is used for a class of methane emissions. Satellite data enables the identification of super-emitter events that produce methane plumes. Over 1,000 methane leaks of this type were found worldwide in 2022.[1] As with other gas leaks, a leak of methane is a safety hazard: coalbed methane in the form of fugitive gas emission has always been a danger to miners. Methane leaks also have a serious environmental impact. Natural gas can contain some ethane and other gases, but from both the safety and environmental point of view the methane content is the major factor.

Methane plume over Turkmenistan, 2020 image from the Sentinel-5 Precursor satellite

As a greenhouse gas and climate change contributor, methane ranks second, following carbon dioxide. Fossil fuel exploration, transportation and production is responsible for about 40% of human-caused methane emissions.[1] Smaller leaks than can be spotted from space comprise a long tail of emissions. They can be identified from planes flying at 900 meters (3,000 ft).[2] According to Fatih Birol of the International Energy Agency, "Methane emissions are still far too high, especially as methane cuts are among the cheapest options to limit near-term global warming".[1]

Examples of methane leaks

Individual methane leaks as reported are specific events, with a large quantity of gas released. An example followed the 2022 Nord Stream pipeline sabotage. Following early reports that the escape might exceed 105 tonnes, The International Methane Emissions Observatory of the United Nations Environment Programme analysed the release. In February 2023 it put the mass of methane gas in the range 7.5 to 23.0 x 104 tonnes. In terms of overall human-made methane emissions, these figures are under 0.1% of the annual total.[3][4]

Satellite data detection has shown that methane super emitter sites in Turkmenistan, USA and Russia are responsible for the biggest number of events from fossil fuel facilities. Equipment failures are normally responsible for the releases, which can last for weeks.[5]

The Aliso Canyon gas leak of 2015 has been quantified as at least 1.09 x 105 tonnes of methane.[6] Satellite data for the Raspadskaya coal mine, Kemerovo Oblast, Russia indicated in 2022 an hourly methane leakage rate of 87 tonnes;[7] this compares to 60 tonnes per hour of natural gas leaking from the Aliso Canyon incident, considered among the worst recorded leak events.[8]

Spain's Technical University of Valencia, in a study published in 2022, found that a super emitter event at a gas and oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico released around 4 x 104 tonnes of methane during a 17-day time period in December 2021 (hourly rate around 98 tonnes).[9] Another major event in 2022 was a leak of 427 tonnes an hour in August, near Turkmenistan's Caspian coast and a major pipeline.[5]

Units

Quantitative reports of methane leaks often use the standard cubic foot (scf) of the United States customary system. Applied to natural gas, a complex mixture of uncertain proportions, and depending on pressure and temperature conditions, the accuracy of calculations converting scf to metric units of mass is subject to limitations. A conversion figure given is 5 x 104 scf of natural gas as 1.32 short tons (1.20 t).[10]

For detection sensitivity, quantitative criteria are typically stated in units of standard cubic feet per hour (scf/h, "skiff", US), or thousand standard cubic feet per day (Mscf/d); or with metric units kilograms per hour (kg/hr), cubic meters per day (m3/d).[11]

To describe the mass balance of methane in the atmosphere, mass rates are described in units of Tg/yr, i.e. teragrams per year where a teragram is 106 tonnes (megagrams).[12] The methane leak from the Permian Basin, a significant region of the Mid-Continent Oil Producing Area, was estimated for 2018/9 from satellite data as 2.7 Tg/yr. Quoted in terms of the proportion of the mass of extracted gas, the leakage comes to 3.7%.[13] The 2021 Carbon Mapper project, a collaboration of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and academia, detected 533 methane super-emitters in the Permian Basin.[14]

References

  1. Carrington, Damian (6 March 2023). "Revealed: 1,000 super-emitting methane leaks risk triggering climate tipping points". The Guardian.
  2. "In Plane Sight: How to measure methane leaks". Climate Investment. 30 November 2021.
  3. McVeigh, Karen; Oltermann, Philip (28 September 2022). "Nord Stream gas leaks may be biggest ever, with warning of 'large climate risk'". The Guardian.
  4. "UNEP finds Nord Stream gas leak may be the highest methane emission event, but still a drop in the ocean". UNEP - UN Environment Programme. 20 February 2023.
  5. "How secretive methane leaks are driving climate change". UNEP. 19 July 2022.
  6. "Aliso Canyon Natural Gas Leak, California Air Resources Board". ww2.arb.ca.gov.
  7. Fountain, Henry (14 June 2022). "One Site, 95 Tons of Methane an Hour". The New York Times.
  8. Milman, Oliver (26 February 2016). "LA gas leak: worst in US history spewed as much pollution as 600,000 cars". The Guardian.
  9. "Methane emissions detected over offshore platform in the Gulf of Mexico". www.esa.int.
  10. "Conversion of volume of natural gas to mass of natural gas". Cimarron. 12 January 2021.
  11. "Understanding Methane Detection Sensitivity, Bridger Photonics". www.bridgerphotonics.com.
  12. Khalil, M. A. K. (29 June 2013). Atmospheric Methane: Sources, Sinks, and Role in Global Change. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 173. ISBN 978-3-642-84605-2.
  13. Gramling, Carolyn (22 April 2020). "Permian Basin is leaking twice as much methane as once thought, Science News".
  14. "Hidden Menace: Massive methane leaks speed up climate change". AP News. 28 July 2022.
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