NASA
Confirms A 2,500-Square-Mile Cloud Of Methane Floating Over US
Southwest
17
October 2014
When
NASA
researchers first saw data indicating a massive cloud of methane
floating over the American Southwest, they found it so incredible
that they dismissed
it as an instrument error.
But
as they continued analyzing data from the European Space Agency’s
Scanning Imaging Absorption Spectrometer for Atmospheric Chartography
instrument from 2002 to 2012, the “atmospheric hot spot” kept
appearing.
The
team at NASA was finally able to take a closer look, and have now
concluded that there
is in fact a 2,500-square-mile cloud of methane—roughly
the size of Delaware—floating over the Four Corners region, where
the borders of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah all intersect.
A
report published
by the NASA researchers in the journal Geophysical Research Letters
concludes that “the
source is likely from established gas, coal, and coalbed methane
mining and processing.”
Indeed, the hot spot happens to be above New Mexico's San Juan Basin,
the most
productive coalbed methane basin in North America.
Methane
is 20-times more potent as a greenhouse gas than CO2, and has been
the focus of an increasing amount of attention, especially in regards
to methane
leaks from fracking
for oil and natural gas. Pockets of natural gas, which is 95-98%
methane, are often found along with oil and simply burned off in a
very visible process called “flaring.” But scientists are
starting to realize that far more methane is being released by the
fracking boom than previously thought.
Earlier
this year, Cornell environmental engineering professor Anthony
Ingraffea released the results of a
study of 41,000 oil and gas wells that
were drilled in Pennsylvania between 2000 and 2012, and found newer
wells using fracking and horizontal drilling methods were far more
likely to be responsible for fugitive emissions of methane.
According
to the NASA researchers, the region of the American Southwest over
which the 2,500-square-foot methane cloud is floating emitted 590,000
metric tons of methane every year between 2002 and 2012—almost 3.5
times the widely used estimates in the European Union’s Emissions
Database for Global Atmospheric Research—and
none of it was from fracking.
That
should prompt a hard look at the entire fossil fuel sector, not just
fracking, according to University of Michigan Professor Eric Kort,
the lead researcher on the study:
“While
fracking has become a focal point in conversations about methane
emissions, it certainly appears from this and other studies that in
the US, fossil fuel extraction activities across the board likely
emit higher than inventory estimates.”
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