Are Methane Emissions in India Being Missed? Satellite Data vs. Reality

Syllabus: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment.

Methane and Its Climate Significance

  • Methane is a potent greenhouse gas, 84 times stronger than CO₂ over a 20-year period.
  • It is generated through decomposition of organic matter, including waste in landfills.
  • While useful as fuel, uncontrolled methane emissions accelerate global warming.
  • Managing methane offers immediate climate gains alongside cleaner urban environments.

India’s Methane Emissions: Waste Sector Focus

  • Around 15% of India’s methane emissions originate from the waste sector.
  • Waste management offers quick mitigation opportunities, unlike agriculture or energy sectors.
  • National frameworks like Swachh Bharat Mission already enable targeted interventions.
  • Effective mitigation depends on accurate identification of emission hotspots.

Challenges in Methane Measurement

  • Traditional estimates rely on models using waste volumes and baseline assumptions.
  • These models need frequent, accurate data, often scarce in developing countries.
  • Aggregated national or regional data makes site-specific detection difficult.
  • Ground-based monitoring requires costly equipment, maintenance, and technical capacity.

Role of Satellite-Based Monitoring

  • Satellites provide an alternative to overcome data and monitoring constraints.
  • Regional satellites track broad methane trends across several kilometres.
  • High-resolution satellites pinpoint hotspots down to a few square metres.
  • India used satellite data in 2023, with ISRO mapping anthropogenic methane emissions.

Key Findings from Satellite Data

  • Major dumpsites like Pirana, Deonar, Kanjurmarg, and sewage outlets show high emissions.
  • Satellites like CarbonMapper Tanager and SRON missions offer public landfill data.
  • Platforms such as ClimateTRACE and WasteMap integrate satellite observations with models.
  • Globally, landfill emissions are 1.8 times higher than model-based estimates.

Discrepancies Between Models and Reality

  • Delhi’s Ghazipur and Bhalswa emit 0.85–0.96 million tons CO₂e, nearly sector totals.
  • Mumbai’s Kanjurmarg emits 10 times higher than model estimates, despite engineered design.
  • Pirana landfill alone matches Gujarat’s entire waste-sector emission estimates.
  • These gaps indicate leakages, accelerated decomposition, or system failures.

Integrating Satellites with Ground Action

  • Satellite data alone faces limitations from cloud cover and weather variability.
  • Urban local bodies must validate findings through ground-level investigations.
  • A feedback loop links satellite detection with rapid on-site corrective action.
  • Infrastructure data, dumping patterns, and gas collection systems enhance accuracy.

Way Forward and Co-benefits

  • Expand satellite coverage across all major waste sites nationwide.
  • Establish on-ground validation systems in metropolitan cities.
  • Create standardised data-sharing platforms across urban and regulatory bodies.
  • Schemes like Gobardhan show methane’s potential through Bio-CNG production.
  • Data-driven waste policy can transform methane control into India’s smart climate solution.

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