Huge methane emission from Russian coal mine

A Canadian firm that operates orbiting methane sensors says it's detected the biggest emission of the gas from a single facility it's ever seen.

The release was observed to come from the vast Raspadskya coal mine, in Kemerovo Oblast, Russia, on 14 January.

GHGSat says the greenhouse gas was entering the atmosphere at a rate of nearly 90 tonnes per hour.

It's the sort of quantity that in a domestic supply would power hundreds of thousands of homes.

But in this case, the methane (also referred to as CH4) was being lost straight into the air.

Methane's global warming potential is 30 times that of carbon dioxide over a 100-year time period.

 

jurassic world dominion movie online
jurassic world dominion movie online
jurassic world dominion movie online
jurassic world dominion movie online
dragon ball super hero movie online
dragon ball super hero movie online
dragon ball super hero movie online
dragon ball super hero movie online
doctor strange 2 movie online
doctor strange 2 movie online
doctor strange 2 movie online
doctor strange 2 movie online
top gun maverick movie online
top gun maverick movie online
lightyear movie online
lightyear movie online
vikram movie download
rrr movie download
major movie download
kgf chapter 2 movie download
bhool bhulaiyaa 2 movie download
777 charlie movie download

 

A major scientific report last year indicated that 30-50% of the current rise in global temperatures is down to methane, and that it's imperative these emissions are curtailed.

 

Montreal-based GHGSat operates a fleet of five orbiting satellites. They carry the highest-resolution CH4-detecting sensors in space today.

The company's business is in identifying human-produced CH4 sources and working with those responsible to close off unnecessary releases. Most of its clients are in the fossil fuel industry.

"We did reach out to Raspadskya about their emissions, but so far we've not had a response," Brody Wight, GHGSat's director of landfills and mines, told BBC News.

Raspadskya is a major complex with some 350km (220 miles) of underground tunnels. It produces coking coal.

GHGSat says its observations show emissions from the facility have been trending up over time, with other large events in excess of 50 tonnes per hour and 10 tonnes per hour recorded in late January and and May respectively.

Ordinarily, a concerning leak at an oil or gas facility might approach 1 tonne per hour.

"The rate of 87,000 kg per hour we detected on 14 January is a huge amount; the biggest we've seen bar none," Mr Wight said.

"The analogy would be emissions coming from about five coal-fired power stations in terms of CO2 equivalent. And that's just from the methane that's coming from extracting coal at Raspadskya. It doesn't include the actual use of this coal which would produce in the neighbourhood of 20-30% additional emissions."

For context, the biggest single-source ultra-emission event ever recorded in the US occurred in October 2015, when methane escaped from an underground natural gas storage facility in Aliso Canyon, near Porter Ranch, Los Angeles.

Estimates put the rate of release as high as 58 tonnes per hour.

發表評論
所有評論
還沒有人評論,想成為第一個評論的人麼? 請在上方評論欄輸入並且點擊發布.
相關文章