METHANE EMISSIONS

Why in the News? 

Recently, ISRO scientists released a first-of-its-kind comprehensive analysis paper on the methane emissions over multiple Indian locations using satellite data.

  • The study employed data from NASA’s Earth Surface Mineral Dust Source Investigation (EMIT) and European Space Agency’s Sentinel-5P TROPOMI.

Key Findings of the Paper: 

  • Regional Emission hotspot: 17 unique plumes were identified in the states of Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Punjab, Gujarat and Assam. 
  • Emission source point: Solid waste landfill sites, sewage treatment plant, wetlands/marshy agriculture, city sewage outlet, oil and gas field, oil refinery and textile industry. 
  • Increase in Methane Emission from municipal solid waste landfills: The net annual emission of India from municipal solid waste landfills is estimated to be 1084 Gg (Giga-gram) in 2015, whereas it was 404 Gg in 1999-2000. 
  • Aids carbon emission: Out of the total carbon emissions in India, 14.43% is attributed to CH4. 
    • The major share of this percentage is contributed by enteric fermentation and rice cultivation areas of agriculture.
About Methane: 

  • Methane (CH4) is a hydrocarbon that is a primary component of natural gas. 
  • It is also a potent greenhouse gas (GHG) responsible for approximately a third of the warming being experienced today.
  • It is a powerful and short-lived (GHG), with a lifetime of about a decade and a Global Warming Potential about 80 times greater than that of carbon dioxide (CO2) during the 20 years after it is released into the atmosphere (IPCC). 
  • Methane emissions lead to ground-level ozone pollution which causes approximately a million premature deaths per year globally, reduces crop productivity and harms ecosystems. 
  • The majority of human-driven methane emissions come from three main sectors:
    • Agriculture (40%): Enteric fermentation from livestock rearing and rice cultivation. 
    • Fossil fuels (35%): Leakage from natural gas, oil and gas field, mining, etc.
    • Solid waste and wastewater (20%): Dumpsites, landfills, etc. 
  • Proven technologies and practices could reduce emissions from the major sectors by approximately 45% by 2030. 
    • Most of these technical solutions can be implemented at a negative or low cost, especially in the fossil fuel and waste sectors. 
  • Anthropogenic emission sources include solid waste disposal sites, O&G industry, mining areas.. 
  • Imaging spectrometer enables detection of highly-localised sources of methane which can be used for identifying leaks coming from very localised sources.

This will close in 0 seconds

Scroll to Top