Energy Analytics

Attacking Methane Emissions Beyond Oil and Gas

byMark Nibbelink

A recent Associated Press article titled “Biden’s climate plan aims to reduce methane emissions” states, “The centerpiece of U.S. actions is a long-awaited rule from the Environmental Protection Agency to tighten methane regulations for the oil and gas sector.”

It also says, “The oil and natural gas industry is the nation’s largest industrial source of methane.”

The logic seems straightforward, that drilling for hydrocarbons produces methane, the infrastructure for moving that product stream around the country will naturally have less than perfect containment, ergo, regulate.

In 2020, the U.S. produced 8,288,717 metric tons of methane. The sum of all the categories in Enverus’ greenhouse gas data set that represent both upstream oil and gas and midstream — production, pipelines, compression gathering and boosting, for example — accounts for about 37% of total 2020 methane. That’s a significant source of methane, to be sure, and one that operators in oil and gas must work harder to minimize.

But the data show underground coal mines are responsible for nearly 14% of methane production in the U.S., and municipal landfills account for nearly 41% of our methane emissions footprint. Together, coal and landfills are responsible for 55% of our methane problem, and are a bigger source of methane pollution than oil and gas.

To get a sense of the scope of the problem, it’s important to realize there are 1,121 municipal landfills in the EPA data set. The screenshot below shows methane points of emission in North Carolina binned and colored by total emitted volume. The most burdensome emitters are the dark red dots, and they are all municipal landfills.

Source: Enverus coded EPA data; screenshot of Enverus PRISM GHG data.

The screenshot below of southwest Pennsylvania shows a concentration of coal mines, two onshore production emitters and power plants.

The mines in the screenshot accounted for more 2020 methane emissions than all U.S. offshore oil and gas methane generation or natural gas processing emissions.

Source: Enverus coded EPA data; screenshot of Enverus PRISM GHG data.

Setting aside the costs to reduce emissions in mines for a moment, coal mines will be a difficult problem to tackle, because unlike other sources of methane emissions, there is a higher percentage of problem mines than in other sectors.Chart showing Total CH4 emissions - underground coal mines

On the plus side, however, there are only 62 mine facilities, and 10 of those are responsible for over half the sector’s emissions. If we look at other sectors, it’s clear that their problematic emission impacts are concentrated in relatively few places.

Charts displaying Total CH4 emissions

Focusing remediation on the top 20 problem sites within a sector will have major impacts without being too disruptive.

Sector No. of Entities Total CH4 in Metric Tons % of Total U.S. CH4 % From Top 20 Top 20 — % of Sector
Municipal Landfills 1121 3,392,882 41 12 2
Gathering and Boosting 744 792,661 10 46 3
Onshore Production 946 1,523,103 45 35 2
Underground Coal Mines 62 1,202,698 15 81 32

Assuming the EPA writes smart guidance, focusing methane remediation efforts in areas that also have CO2 problems would be an efficient way to deploy administrative and technical resources to execute on this plan.

Remediation in upstream oil and gas should be relatively straightforward — find the well with the leaking casing, or the gas compressor with a bad seal, or the pipeline that drones have identified as leaking, and go fix the emitting infrastructure. It’s easily identifiable and mostly mechanical in nature. Upstream and midstream operators should embrace leak detection and quickly eliminate those leaks. It’s good politics and ultimately improves the bottom line.

I don’t know what the process would be for capturing leaking methane from a coal mine or a landfill. My guess is that it’s much more complicated and probably expensive.

Perhaps the best course of action for the Biden administration — especially post-Virginia election — would be to broaden their focus from just oil and gas and tackle a couple of smaller landfill and coal mine projects.

Project costs would be smaller and climbing the learning curve will be quicker. Deploy those lessons learned to larger emitters and get a bigger impact, quickly.

Instead of using a federal sledgehammer, limited but targeted interventions by regional federal teams using both carrots and sticks could go a long way toward reducing the U.S. warming curve. Judiciously applied funds from the Build Back Better bill, when passed, could help the administration truthfully claim it is staying true to its climate policies by using smart money to make a noticeable difference in our national methane footprint.

Picture of Mark Nibbelink

Mark Nibbelink

Mark Nibbelink is co-founder and director of university outreach at Enverus. Before co-founding Enverus (formerly Drillinginfo) in 1999, Mark had a long career as a prospect geologist at Gulf Oil before beginning work as an independent geologist. Mark is responsible for quality control and data integrity. He received his Bachelor of Arts in geology and his master’s in geology and geophysics from Dartmouth College.

Subscribe to the Enverus Blog

A weekly update on the latest “no-fluff” insight and analysis of the energy industry.

Related Content

accurate-grid-forecastin
Energy Transition Intelligence
ByMatthew Keillor, Editor, Enverus Intelligence

In March 2021, the Biden administration set a goal of deploying 30 GW of offshore wind capacity in the U.S. by 2030. These efforts have faced significant growing pains.

ev-image
Energy Transition Power and Renewables
ByPrashant Kumar

The pace of electric vehicle (EV) sales growth has slowed down based on the most recent North American EV sales data.

Enverus News Release - The upside of repowering wind
Power and Renewables
ByEric Yen

In the fast-paced world of energy trading, where every fluctuation in supply and demand can have significant implications, weather events wield unparalleled influence over power pricing.

Enverus Press Release - Enverus selected for NET Power’s commercial initiative
Energy Transition Intelligence
ByMatthew Keillor, Editor, Enverus Intelligence

U.S. renewables developers Arevon Energy, Longroad Energy Holdings and Broad Reach Power showed the most improvement among the top 20 wholly owned renewable energy portfolios under construction in Q1, according to an analysis using Enverus Core data presented in the...

p&r
Power and Renewables
ByAnton Vykhodtsev

Renewable energy adoption continues to rise, signaling a promising shift towards sustainable power sources. Industry challenges persist, from grid operation perspectives to new regulatory policies and supply chain constraints.

Evolve2022_0104
EVOLVE
BySusie Yuill

The Enverus EVOLVE Conference, the pivotal event for energy professionals, thought leaders and experts, to come together, trade ideas and gain new knowledge, is happening May 7 – 9 in downtown Houston at the Marriott Marquis.

risk-manager-sector
Trading and Risk
ByChris Griggs

Europe’s energy market is weathering a storm of transformations. With natural gas inventory at peak levels thanks to a diversified supply chain and falling prices, traders and analysts face an evolving challenge unlike any other.

3-deploy-wind-solar
Energy Transition
ByKevin Kang

The levelized cost of energy (LCOE) serves as a valuable measure for assessing the economic viability of a specific project or energy source.

wind-power-energy-woman-trader-stock
Energy Transition
ByCarson Kearl

Questions around the relationship of data centers to energy demand are very quickly etching themselves onto the minds of industry and technology participants alike.

Let’s get started!

We’ll follow up right away to show you a quick product tour.

Let’s get started!

We’ll follow up right away to show you a quick product tour.

Sign up for our Blog

Register Today

Sign Up

Power Your Insights

Connect with an Expert

Access Product Tour

Speak to an Expert