Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2021)

Sustained methane emissions from China after 2012 despite declining coal production and rice-cultivated area

  • Jianxiong Sheng,
  • Rachel Tunnicliffe,
  • Anita L Ganesan,
  • Joannes D Maasakkers,
  • Lu Shen,
  • Ronald G Prinn,
  • Shaojie Song,
  • Yuzhong Zhang,
  • Tia Scarpelli,
  • A Anthony Bloom,
  • Matthew Rigby,
  • Alistair J Manning,
  • Robert J Parker,
  • Hartmut Boesch,
  • Xin Lan,
  • Bo Zhang,
  • Minghao Zhuang,
  • Xi Lu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac24d1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 10
p. 104018

Abstract

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China’s anthropogenic methane emissions are the largest of any country in the world. A recent study using atmospheric observations suggested that recent policies aimed at reducing emissions of methane due to coal production in China after 2010 had been largely ineffective. Here, based on a longer observational record and an updated modelling approach, we find a statistically significant positive linear trend (0.36 ± 0.04 ( $\pm1\sigma$ ) Tg CH _4 yr ^−2 ) in China’s methane emissions for 2010–2017. This trend was slowing down at a statistically significant rate of -0.1 ± 0.04 Tg CH _4 yr ^−3 . We find that this decrease in growth rate can in part be attributed to a decline in China’s coal production. However, coal mine methane emissions have not declined as rapidly as production, implying that there may be substantial fugitive emissions from abandoned coal mines that have previously been overlooked. We also find that emissions over rice-growing and aquaculture-farming regions show a positive trend (0.13 ± 0.05 Tg CH _4 yr ^−2 for 2010–2017) despite reports of shrinking rice paddy areas, implying potentially significant emissions from new aquaculture activities, which are thought to be primarily located on converted rice paddies.

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