Geostationary satellite observations of extreme and transient methane emissions from oil and gas infrastructure.
Marc Watine-GuiuDaniel J VaronItziar Irakulis-LoitxateNicholas BalasusDaniel J JacobPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
We demonstrate geostationary satellite monitoring of large transient methane point sources with the US Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES). GOES provides continuous 5- to 10-min coverage of the Americas at 1 to 2 km nadir pixel resolution in two shortwave infrared spectral bands from which large methane plumes can be retrieved. We track the full evolution of an extreme methane release from the El Encino-La Laguna natural gas pipeline in Durango, Mexico on 12 May 2019. The release lasted 3 h at a variable rate of 260 to 550 metric tons of methane per hour and totaled 1,130 to 1,380 metric tons. We report several other detections of transient point sources from oil/gas infrastructure, from which we infer a detection limit of 10 to 100 t h -1 . Our results show that extreme releases of methane can last less than an hour, as from deliberate venting, and would thus be difficult to identify and quantify with low-Earth orbit satellites.
Keyphrases
- anaerobic digestion
- carbon dioxide
- climate change
- blood pressure
- room temperature
- cerebral ischemia
- drinking water
- municipal solid waste
- sewage sludge
- optical coherence tomography
- magnetic resonance
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- risk assessment
- life cycle
- single molecule
- quantum dots