Страховка пари до ₽1500 от БК GGBet.ru

Промокод: BR1500

Get a bonus

Users' Choice

natural-gas-863227_1280

NASA: New Mexico Methane 'hot spot' linked to fossil fuel industry

A NASA study in New Mexico finds that roughly 50 percent of San Juan Basin methane emissions come from more than 250 very large polluters that were detected by intensive  aerial surveys and ground crews.

The  study of methane emissions generated by the oil and gas industry in the New Mexico's San Juan Basin is a major step forward in understanding the causes of New Mexico’s methane “hot spot.” It follows up on a 2014 satellite-based study that initially found the “hot spot” and sought to identify its specific causes.

According to the study's authors, this finding confirms researchers’ earlier speculation that most of the basin's methane emissions are related to natural gas extraction and coal mining.

The study did not determine the source of the remaining 50 percent of emissions.

Given the more than 20,000 gas wells, myriad storage tanks, thousands of miles of pipelines and several gas processing plants in the area, NASA's finding that the oil and gas industry is primarily responsible for the “hot spot” is not surprising, according to the Western Environmental Law Center.

WELC, in a news release, said researchers found only one large source of methane not related to oil and gas operations: venting from the San Juan coal mine.

Despite identifying the source of the emissions, one of the authors’ key conclusions is not supported by the evidence, according to WELC. The report says that the small number of large methane sources, “suggests that mitigation of field-wide emissions such as those estimated for Four Corners will be less costly because it only requires identifying and fixing a few emitters.”

WELC said, "The other 50 percent of methane emissions in the region cannot be ignored and mitigating field-wide emissions will require the oil and gas industry to cut emissions from all sources, large and small, if we are to eliminate New Mexico’s 'hot spot.' New comprehensive oil and gas methane standards from the EPA and the Bureau of Land Management are currently in the works and, once completed, will require the industry to cut its methane emissions from all sources."

Leave a reply

The website you are trying to access is not one of our trusted partners.
You will be forwarded to the website
Visit site