Using satellites to uncover large methane emissions from landfills

Author:

Maasakkers Joannes D.1ORCID,Varon Daniel J.23ORCID,Elfarsdóttir Aldís1ORCID,McKeever Jason3,Jervis Dylan3,Mahapatra Gourav1,Pandey Sudhanshu1ORCID,Lorente Alba1ORCID,Borsdorff Tobias1ORCID,Foorthuis Lodewijck R.1ORCID,Schuit Berend J.13ORCID,Tol Paul1,van Kempen Tim A.1ORCID,van Hees Richard1ORCID,Aben Ilse1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. SRON Netherlands Institute for Space Research, Leiden, Netherlands.

2. Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.

3. GHGSat Inc., Montréal, Quebec, Canada.

Abstract

As atmospheric methane concentrations increase at record pace, it is critical to identify individual emission sources with high potential for mitigation. Here, we leverage the synergy between satellite instruments with different spatiotemporal coverage and resolution to detect and quantify emissions from individual landfills. We use the global surveying Tropospheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) to identify large emission hot spots and then zoom in with high-resolution target-mode observations from the GHGSat instrument suite to identify the responsible facilities and characterize their emissions. Using this approach, we detect and analyze strongly emitting landfills (3 to 29 t hour −1 ) in Buenos Aires, Delhi, Lahore, and Mumbai. Using TROPOMI data in an inversion, we find that city-level emissions are 1.4 to 2.6 times larger than reported in commonly used emission inventories and that the landfills contribute 6 to 50% of those emissions. Our work demonstrates how complementary satellites enable global detection, identification, and monitoring of methane superemitters at the facility level.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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