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1.
Nature ; 575(7781): 180-184, 2019 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31695210

RESUMEN

Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas and is targeted for emissions mitigation by the US state of California and other jurisdictions worldwide1,2. Unique opportunities for mitigation are presented by point-source emitters-surface features or infrastructure components that are typically less than 10 metres in diameter and emit plumes of highly concentrated methane3. However, data on point-source emissions are sparse and typically lack sufficient spatial and temporal resolution to guide their mitigation and to accurately assess their magnitude4. Here we survey more than 272,000 infrastructure elements in California using an airborne imaging spectrometer that can rapidly map methane plumes5-7. We conduct five campaigns over several months from 2016 to 2018, spanning the oil and gas, manure-management and waste-management sectors, resulting in the detection, geolocation and quantification of emissions from 564 strong methane point sources. Our remote sensing approach enables the rapid and repeated assessment of large areas at high spatial resolution for a poorly characterized population of methane emitters that often appear intermittently and stochastically. We estimate net methane point-source emissions in California to be 0.618 teragrams per year (95 per cent confidence interval 0.523-0.725), equivalent to 34-46 per cent of the state's methane inventory8 for 2016. Methane 'super-emitter' activity occurs in every sector surveyed, with 10 per cent of point sources contributing roughly 60 per cent of point-source emissions-consistent with a study of the US Four Corners region that had a different sectoral mix9. The largest methane emitters in California are a subset of landfills, which exhibit persistent anomalous activity. Methane point-source emissions in California are dominated by landfills (41 per cent), followed by dairies (26 per cent) and the oil and gas sector (26 per cent). Our data have enabled the identification of the 0.2 per cent of California's infrastructure that is responsible for these emissions. Sharing these data with collaborating infrastructure operators has led to the mitigation of anomalous methane-emission activity10.


Asunto(s)
Monitoreo del Ambiente , Metano/análisis , Administración de Residuos , California , Efecto Invernadero , Estiércol , Metano/química , Metano/metabolismo , Gas Natural , Industria del Petróleo y Gas/métodos , Petróleo , Aguas Residuales
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(38): e2202338119, 2022 09 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36099297

RESUMEN

Understanding, prioritizing, and mitigating methane (CH4) emissions requires quantifying CH4 budgets from facility scales to regional scales with the ability to differentiate between source sectors. We deployed a tiered observing system for multiple basins in the United States (San Joaquin Valley, Uinta, Denver-Julesburg, Permian, Marcellus). We quantify strong point source emissions (>10 kg CH4 h-1) using airborne imaging spectrometers, attribute them to sectors, and assess their intermittency with multiple revisits. We compare these point source emissions to total basin CH4 fluxes derived from inversion of Sentinel-5p satellite CH4 observations. Across basins, point sources make up on average 40% of the regional flux. We sampled some basins several times across multiple months and years and find a distinct bimodal structure to emission timescales: the total point source budget is split nearly in half by short-lasting and long-lasting emission events. With the increasing airborne and satellite observing capabilities planned for the near future, tiered observing systems will more fully quantify and attribute CH4 emissions from facility to regional scales, which is needed to effectively and efficiently reduce methane emissions.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Atmosféricos , Metano , Contaminantes Atmosféricos/análisis , Metano/análisis , Estados Unidos
3.
Opt Express ; 25(8): 9186-9195, 2017 Apr 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28437992

RESUMEN

The intrinsic spectral dimensionality indicates the observable degrees of freedom in Earth's solar-reflected light field, quantifying the diversity of spectral content accessible by visible and infrared remote sensing. The solar-reflected regime spans the 0.38 - 2.5 µm interval, and is captured by a wide range of current and planned instruments on both airborne and orbital platforms. To date there has been no systematic study of its spectral dimensionality as a function of space, time, and land cover. Here we report a multi-site, multi-year statistical survey by NASA's "Classic" Airborne Visible Near InfraRed Spectrometer (AVIRIS-C). AVIRIS-C measured large regions of California, USA, spanning wide latitudinal and elevation gradients containing all canonical MODIS land cover types. The spectral uniformity of the AVIRIS-C design enabled consistent in-scene assessment of measurement noise across acquisitions. The estimated dimensionality as a function of cover type ranged from the low 20s to the high 40s, and was approximately 50 for the combined dataset. This result indicates the high diversity of physical processes distinguishable by imaging spectrometers like AVIRIS-C for one region of the Earth.

4.
Science ; 383(6690): 1499-1504, 2024 Mar 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38547284

RESUMEN

Methane emissions from solid waste may represent a substantial fraction of the global anthropogenic budget, but few comprehensive studies exist to assess inventory assumptions. We quantified emissions at hundreds of large landfills across 18 states in the United States between 2016 and 2022 using airborne imaging spectrometers. Spanning 20% of open United States landfills, this represents the most systematic measurement-based study of methane point sources of the waste sector. We detected significant point source emissions at a majority (52%) of these sites, many with emissions persisting over multiple revisits (weeks to years). We compared these against independent contemporaneous in situ airborne observations at 15 landfills and established good agreement. Our findings indicate a need for long-term, synoptic-scale monitoring of landfill emissions in the context of climate change mitigation policy.

5.
Sci Adv ; 9(46): eadh2391, 2023 Nov 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37976355

RESUMEN

Carbon dioxide and methane emissions are the two primary anthropogenic climate-forcing agents and an important source of uncertainty in the global carbon budget. Uncertainties are further magnified when emissions occur at fine spatial scales (<1 km), making attribution challenging. We present the first observations from NASA's Earth Surface Mineral Dust Source Investigation (EMIT) imaging spectrometer showing quantification and attribution of fine-scale methane (0.3 to 73 tonnes CH4 hour-1) and carbon dioxide sources (1571 to 3511 tonnes CO2 hour-1) spanning the oil and gas, waste, and energy sectors. For selected countries observed during the first 30 days of EMIT operations, methane emissions varied at a regional scale, with the largest total emissions observed for Turkmenistan (731 ± 148 tonnes CH4 hour-1). These results highlight the contributions of current and planned point source imagers in closing global carbon budgets.

6.
J Geophys Res Biogeosci ; 127(6): e2021JG006711, 2022 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35859986

RESUMEN

Future global Visible Shortwave Infrared Imaging Spectrometers, such as the Surface Biology and Geology (SBG) mission, will regularly cover the Earth's entire terrestrial land area. These missions need high fidelity atmospheric correction to produce consistent maps of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem traits. However, estimation of surface reflectance and atmospheric state is computationally challenging, and the terabyte data volumes of global missions will exceed available processing capacity. This article describes how missions can overcome this bottleneck using the spatial continuity of atmospheric fields. Contemporary imaging spectrometers oversample atmospheric spatial variability, so it is not necessary to invert every pixel. Spatially sparse solutions can train local linear emulators that provide fast, exact inversions in their vicinity. We find that estimating the atmosphere at 200 m scales can outperform traditional atmospheric correction, improving speed by one to two orders of magnitude with no measurable penalty to accuracy. We validate performance with an airborne field campaign, showing reflectance accuracies with RMSE of 1.1% or better compared to ground measurements of diverse targets. These errors are statistically consistent with retrieval uncertainty budgets. Local emulators can close the efficiency gap and make rigorous model inversion algorithms feasible for global missions such as SBG.

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