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US oil and gas system emissions from nearly one million aerial site measurements

As airborne methane surveys of oil and gas systems continue to discover large emissions that are missing from official estimates , the true scope of methane emissions from energy production has yet to be quantified. We integrate approximately one million aerial site measurements into regional emissi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature (London) 2024-03, Vol.627 (8003), p.328-334
Main Authors: Sherwin, Evan D, Rutherford, Jeffrey S, Zhang, Zhan, Chen, Yuanlei, Wetherley, Erin B, Yakovlev, Petr V, Berman, Elena S F, Jones, Brian B, Cusworth, Daniel H, Thorpe, Andrew K, Ayasse, Alana K, Duren, Riley M, Brandt, Adam R
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:As airborne methane surveys of oil and gas systems continue to discover large emissions that are missing from official estimates , the true scope of methane emissions from energy production has yet to be quantified. We integrate approximately one million aerial site measurements into regional emissions inventories for six regions in the USA, comprising 52% of onshore oil and 29% of gas production over 15 aerial campaigns. We construct complete emissions distributions for each, employing empirically grounded simulations to estimate small emissions. Total estimated emissions range from 0.75% (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.65%, 0.84%) of covered natural gas production in a high-productivity, gas-rich region to 9.63% (95% CI 9.04%, 10.39%) in a rapidly expanding, oil-focused region. The six-region weighted average is 2.95% (95% CI 2.79%, 3.14%), or roughly three times the national government inventory estimate . Only 0.05-1.66% of well sites contribute the majority (50-79%) of well site emissions in 11 out of 15 surveys. Ancillary midstream facilities, including pipelines, contribute 18-57% of estimated regional emissions, similarly concentrated in a small number of point sources. Together, the emissions quantified here represent an annual loss of roughly US$1 billion in commercial gas value and a US$9.3 billion annual social cost . Repeated, comprehensive, regional remote-sensing surveys offer a path to detect these low-frequency, high-consequence emissions for rapid mitigation, incorporation into official emissions inventories and a clear-eyed assessment of the most effective emission-finding technologies for a given region.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-024-07117-5