Potential Underestimate in Reported Bottom-up Methane Emissions from Oil and Gas Operations in the Delaware Basin

Author:

Riddick Stuart N.1ORCID,Mbua Mercy1ORCID,Santos Arthur1ORCID,Hartzell Wendy1,Zimmerle Daniel J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Energy Institute, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80524, USA

Abstract

Methane is a greenhouse gas and identified as a key driver of near-term climate change. Bottom-up approaches estimate annual methane loss from US natural gas production and transport at 6 Tg, but recent studies suggest this may be an underestimate. To investigate this possibility, an equipment-based emissions inventory, using EPA emission factors, was developed to calculate methane emissions from oil and gas operations in the Delaware basin, USA. Emission factors and activity data were then updated using contemporary and region-specific measurement data. The original inventory estimated emissions at 315 Gg CH4 y−1 (gas production-normalized rate of 0.6% loss), while the updated inventory estimated emissions of 1500 Gg CH4 y−1 (2.8% loss). The largest changes resulted from large fugitive emissions from oil production (+430 Gg CH4 y−1), updating maintenance activity emissions (+214 Gg CH4 y−1), considering flaring inefficiency (+174 Gg CH4 y−1), and the inclusion of associated gas venting (+136 Gg CH4 y−1). This study suggests that a systematic underestimate probably exists in current bottom-up inventories and identifies sources currently missing or may be incorrect. We also strongly recommend that emission factors should be validated through direct comparison against measurement campaigns that include long-tail distributions typical of oil and gas activities.

Funder

Collaboratory to Advance Methane Science

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

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