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Natural Gas Initiative is a cross-campus effort of the Precourt Institute for Energy.

Journal Article

Technological maturity of aircraft-based methane sensing for greenhouse gas mitigation

Methane is a major contributor to anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. Identifying large sources of methane, particularly from the oil and gas sectors, will be essential for mitigating climate change. Aircraft-based methane sensing platforms can rapidly detect and quantify methane point-source emissions across large geographic regions, and play an increasingly important role in industrial methane management and greenhouse gas inventory. We independently evaluate the performance of five major methane-sensing aircraft platforms: Carbon Mapper, GHGSat-AV, Insight M, MethaneAIR, and Scientific Aviation. Over a 6 week period, we released metered gas for over 700 single-blind measurements across all five platforms to evaluate their ability to detect and quantify emissions that range from 1 to over 1,500 kg(CH4)/h. Aircraft consistently quantified releases above 10 kg(CH4)/h, and GHGSat-AV and Insight M detected emissions below 5 kg(CH4)/h. Fully blinded quantification estimates for platforms using downward-facing imaging spectrometers have parity slopes ranging from 0.76 to 1.13, with R2 values of 0.61 to 0.93; the platform using continuous air sampling has a parity slope of 0.5 (R2 = 0.93). Results demonstrate that aircraft-based methane sensing has matured since previous studies and is ready for an increasingly important role in environmental policy and regulation.  Read Article

Author(s)
Sahar H El Abbadi
Zhenlin Chen
Philippine M. Burdeau
,effrey S. Rutherford
Yuanlei Chen
Zhan Zhang
Adam R. Brandt
Evan D. Sherwin
Journal Name
Environmental Science & Technology
Publication Date
May 17, 2024
DOI
10.1021/acs.est.4c02439