Let a molecule of carbon dioxide escape into the atmosphere, and it stays for centuries. There’s more than enough up there to smother the planet like a too-warm quilt, trapping heat within and weirding the weather. The damage will be felt for generations.
But CO2 is only part of the patchwork of warming. Methane locks in far more heat in the short term and has been leaking just as relentlessly.
2K parts per billion
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0
2020
800,000 years ago
2K parts per billion
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2020
800,000 years ago
2K parts per billion
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2020
800,000 years ago
The difference is that methane’s power fades faster, within just decades. If we stopped emissions today, almost all the methane in the atmospheric blanket would degrade within a lifetime.
Note: Absolute Global Warming Potential (AGWP) is a model that describes heat trapped by a kilogram of gas over time. This radiative forcing is measured in watts per square meter per kilogram per year, and is represented here in picowatts. Global Warming Potential (GWP) is the ratio of the AGWP of methane and of CO2.
Sources: Environmental Defense Fund; Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
That’s why the U.S. and the European Union have been pressing countries to make a methane-cutting pledge. If enough nations sign up and meet the target—reaching a 30% reduction from last year’s levels by the end of the decade—the global movement against methane could prove to be one of the crucial achievements of the COP26 climate talks taking place in November in Glasgow, Scotland.
But much more could be done. Raising that target to 50% could help us prevent 0.3°C of warming by the 2040s and 0.5°C by 2100, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Given that the planet has already heated up 1.1°C, it would make a big difference to the world’s long-term warming forecast. Move quickly enough on methane, and the Paris Agreement goal of limiting the temperature increase to 1.5°C becomes far more feasible.
“The conversation is changing. Methane has risen to the fore,” says Sarah Smith, program director for super pollutants at Clean Air Task Force, a nonprofit advocacy group. “World leaders are starting to recognize that curbing methane is the only clear strategy to cut warming over the next two decades.”
An atmospheric census would find 200 molecules of CO2 for every one of methane. Yet methane has caused nearly a quarter of the world’s observed heating over the past two and a half centuries, while CO2 accounts for only about half.
The difference comes down to atmospheric physics and molecular mechanics. Every day the sun pumps vast amounts of energy into the planet. Some of it is absorbed by the land and oceans at the Earth’s surface, but most is reflected back into the sky in the form of infrared radiation. It’s on that journey back into space that most of the heat gets trapped under the quilt of greenhouse gases. The CO2 molecules number an astonishing 30 trillion trillion trillion trillion—that’s 30 followed by 36 zeros—all jiggling constantly while absorbing and reflecting infrared light.
Methane does the same, except that its molecular structure, consisting of a carbon atom surrounded by four hydrogen atoms, traps heat more effectively. But that molecular structure and elemental makeup also allows methane to break down faster. This process happens through its easy interaction with other gases, such as oxygen, through which it forms new compounds, including CO2.
Historically speaking, most of the methane released by direct human action has come from rice production and raising cows, which belch the greenhouse gas in significant quantities. But over the past 50 years, leaky fossil fuel infrastructure, much of it tied to the rise of natural gas, has also grown to become a supersized contributor.
Agriculture 42%
Energy 38%
Waste 18%
Livestock
Rice
Agriculture 42%
Energy 38%
Waste 18%
Livestock
Rice
Agriculture 42%
Energy 38%
Livestock
Waste 18%
Rice
The good news is that we have the tools we need right now to stop a large chunk of those emissions. Research by the United Nations found that as much as 80% of measures to curb leaks from oil and gas operations can be implemented at no cost, and many may even result in savings. Virtually all methane leaks from the coal sector could be painlessly eliminated.
“A huge amount of methane leakage is happening in the oil and gas industry,” says Cat Abreu, founder and executive director of Destination Zero, which seeks to eliminate fugitive methane. “It’s very cheap to cut, and, in many cases, it’s a job creator.”
Technically and economically feasible
Technically feasible
Residual
Livestock
30% technically feasible
31% of global methane
emissions in 2030
Oil and Gas 85%
26%
Landfills 80%
14%
Coal mining 62%
11%
Rice 60%
8%
Wastewater 70%
6%
Technically and economically feasible
Technically feasible
Residual
Livestock
30% technically feasible
31% of global methane
emissions in 2030
Oil and Gas 85%
26%
Landfills 80%
14%
Coal mining 62%
11%
Rice 60%
8%
Wastewater 70%
6%
Technically and economically feasible
Technically feasible
Residual
Livestock
30% technically feasible
31% of global methane
emissions in 2030
Oil and Gas 85%
26%
Landfills 80%
14%
Coal mining 62%
11%
Rice 60%
8%
Wastewater 70%
6%
Tackling methane starts with the oil and gas industry, where up to 85% of methane emissions could be mitigated by 2030 using existing technology, according to a paper published in Environmental Research Letters last year. The gas has been leaking freely into the air for years from fossil fuel infrastructure, especially in major producing and consuming nations such as China, Russia and the U.S.
Surgut
Taiyuan
Bismarck
Nanjing
El Paso
Novokuznetsk
China 23%
Russia 21%
U.S. 9%
Iran
3%
India
3%
China 23%
Taiyuan
Nanjing
Russia 21%
Surgut
Novokuznetsk
U.S. 9%
El Paso
Iran 3%
India 3%
Even though lost methane is a product that companies can sell to heat homes and spin power-plant turbines, most put little effort into tracking down fugitive plumes. Efforts by the U.S. government to monitor leaks since 2014 haven’t nearly reflected the full scope of the climate damage.
Using satellite data, researchers from Harvard found that emissions from the Permian Basin in Texas and New Mexico over an 11-month period were twice government figures. Emissions in the state of Pennsylvania are at least 15% higher than previously thought, according to a study by scientists at Cornell.
Energy
Waste
Agriculture
Livestock
Rice
Seattle
Minneapolis
Detroit
New York
Chicago
San Francisco
Washington D.C.
Denver
St. Louis
Los Angeles
Appalachian Basin
San Diego
Atlanta
Permian Basin
Dallas
New Orleans
Houston
Miami
Waste
Energy
Agriculture
Livestock
Rice
Seattle
Minneapolis
San Francisco
New York
Denver
St. Louis
Appalachian
Permian
Houston
Energy
Waste
Agriculture
Livestock
Rice
Seattle
Minneapolis
Detroit
New York
San Francisco
Denver
St. Louis
Los Angeles
Appalachian
Permian
Dallas
Houston
The French satellite-analytics company Kayrros SAS estimates that the Permian basin has emitted more than 2 million tons of methane this year through September, equivalent to the annual emissions from at least 40 million passenger cars.
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2
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25
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250
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250
Until recently methane detection was more of a craft project than a science. Producers and regulators relied on crude techniques such as throwing a tarp over a pipe to see if it bubbled or sending workers out to inspect equipment. There are now a host of technologies to detect fugitive methane, from parsing satellite data to deploying drones and handheld infrared cameras. Once a leak is detected, plugging it isn’t that different from high-tech plumbing.
Regulations in many countries also require coal-mining companies to build infrastructure that recovers methane before it’s released. The gas is collected and burned to help power the plant’s operations, so the costs work out favorably in the end.
The trash piled up in the landfills doesn’t just release CO2 when it decomposes. In the absence of oxygen, methane forms instead. The gas builds up inside the mountains of waste, eventually escaping to the surface. Large clouds of methane in cities from Buenos Aires to Lahore have been attributed to landfills.
Beijing
Detroit
Nanjing
New York
Cologne
Moscow
Jakarta
Hong Kong
China 11%
Indonesia 9%
U.S. 9%
Russia 8%
EU-28 8%
China 11%
Beijing
Nanjing
Hong Kong
Indonesia 9%
Jakarta
U.S. 9%
Detroit
New York
Russia 8%
Moscow
EU-28 8%
Cologne
“Landfills are pretty complicated facilities,” says Bram Maasakkers, a researcher at the Netherlands Institute for Space Research. Scientists estimate that about 10% of human-caused methane comes from landfills, he says, “but how good the data is varies across the world.”
A growing number of landfill operators are starting to capture methane at their sites, which can be used to fuel the plants and garbage trucks. The Environmental Research Letters study estimates that 80% of emissions from landfills could be mitigated by 2030 using existing technology. The other solution is to cut down on waste and recycle more trash instead of discarding it.
The largest source of methane comes from growing the crops and meat that feed the world. And those emissions are set to grow as the global population increases and developing countries get richer.
New Delhi
Nanjing
Omaha
Amsterdam
Kolkata
Sao Paulo
Changsha
Milan
U.S. 6%
India 14%
China 9%
Brazil 9%
EU-28 7%
India 14%
New Delhi
Kolkata
China 9%
Nanjing
Changsha
Brazil 9%
Sao Paulo
EU-28 7%
Amsterdam
Milan
Omaha
U.S. 6%
More than two-thirds of the world’s rice is grown by flooding fields that cover an area twice as large as France. Microbes in the waterlogged soil produce large quantities of methane.
Research in China, one of the biggest producers of rice, has found it’s possible to cut methane in half by draining water from rice paddies in the middle of the growing season. The process also increases rice yields and saves water. Other researchers, in India and the Philippines, have found new varieties of rice that can thrive in dry fields—though their yields don’t yet match those of widely grown varieties.
Energy
Waste
Agriculture
Livestock
Rice
Urumqi
Tashkent
Beijing
Seoul
Tokyo
Kabul
Shanghai
Chengdu
New Delhi
Taipei
Kolkata
Hong Kong
Mumbai
Manila
Bangkok
Bangalore
Singapore
Jakarta
Energy
Waste
Agriculture
Livestock
Rice
Urumqi
Beijing
Tokyo
Kabul
Shanghai
New Delhi
Kolkata
Hong Kong
Manila
Bangkok
Singapore
Jakarta
Energy
Waste
Agriculture
Livestock
Rice
Urumqi
Tashkent
Beijing
Seoul
Tokyo
Kabul
Shanghai
Chengdu
New Delhi
Taipei
Kolkata
Hong Kong
Mumbai
Manila
Bangkok
Bangalore
Singapore
Jakarta
For the world’s 1.4 billion cows, the problem starts in the gut. The ruminants get help from bacteria to break down the hard-to-digest grasses they eat. The cost, however, is the production of methane as a byproduct.
Energy
Waste
Agriculture
Livestock
Rice
Stockholm
Moscow
Hamburg
Amsterdam
Berlin
Warsaw
London
Kiev
Frankfurt
Paris
Vienna
Budapest
Milan
Bucharest
Barcelona
Istanbul
Madrid
Lisbon
Athens
Algiers
Mashhad
Aleppo
Tehran
Casablanca
Baghdad
Tripoli
Tel Aviv
Kuwait
Cairo
Dubai
Riyadh
Khartoum
Sanaa
Dakar
Kano
Addis Ababa
Lagos
Monrovia
Accra
Abidjan
Energy
Waste
Agriculture
Livestock
Rice
Stockholm
Moscow
Hamburg
Kiev
Paris
Budapest
Milan
Istanbul
Lisbon
Algiers
Baghdad
Tripoli
Cairo
Riyadh
Khartoum
Lagos
Energy
Waste
Agriculture
Livestock
Rice
Stockholm
Moscow
Berlin
Warsaw
London
Kiev
Paris
Budapest
Bucharest
Milan
Istanbul
Lisbon
Algiers
Tehran
Casablanca
Baghdad
Tripoli
Tel Aviv
Cairo
Dubai
Riyadh
Khartoum
Sanaa
Dakar
Kano
Addis Ababa
Lagos
Cutting these methane emissions is more challenging, but researchers are working on several potential solutions. One is to use special feed additives that help cows produce less methane. Cargill, the world’s largest agriculture company, is also urging suppliers to put special masks on cattle that would trap methane and convert it into CO2.
In the fight against global warming, methane has flown under the radar for too long. But there’s increasing recognition that tackling the invisible, odorless gas is one of the easiest, cheapest, and most feasible ways to make a real difference in slowing climate change. It’s the rare climate problem with a fix that can be felt by those alive right now, not their great-grandchildren.
“The world will continue to warm as long as CO2 is being pumped into the atmosphere,” concluded an August editorial in the scientific journal Nature. But curbing methane will help buy “humanity a bit more time to do what needs to be done.”