Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2020)

Attribution of methane point source emissions using airborne imaging spectroscopy and the Vista-California methane infrastructure dataset

  • Talha Rafiq,
  • Riley M Duren,
  • Andrew K Thorpe,
  • Kelsey Foster,
  • Risa Patarsuk,
  • Charles E Miller,
  • Francesca M Hopkins

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ab9af8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 12
p. 124001

Abstract

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Methane (CH _4 ), an important greenhouse gas and pollutant, has been targeted for mitigation. Our recent California airborne survey identified >500 CH _4 point source super-emitters, which accounted for 34%–46% of the statewide CH _4 emissions inventory for 2016 (Duren et al 2019 Nature 575 180–184). Individual plumes were observed in close proximity to expected methane emitting infrastructure, including gas storage facilities, hydrocarbon storage tanks, landfills, dairy lagoons, and pipeline leaks. In order to systematically attribute these plumes to their sources, we developed Vista-CA a geospatial database, that contains more than 900 000 validated CH _4 infrastructure elements in the state of California. In parallel, we developed a complimentary algorithm that attributes any individual CH _4 plume observation to the most likely Vista-CA source with 99% accuracy. The present study illustrates the capabilities of the Vista-CA CH _4 database along with the Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer—Next Generation airborne CH _4 retrievals to locate and attribute CH _4 point sources to specific economic sectors to improve the state CH _4 budget and identify mitigation targets.

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