Intermittent methane emissions in the Permian Basin
收藏DataCite Commons2023-09-15 更新2025-04-16 收录
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https://dataverse.jpl.nasa.gov/citation?persistentId=doi:10.48577/jpl.I3AXHA
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The Permian Basin is the largest and fastest growing oil and gas (O&G) producing region in the United States. We conducted an extensive airborne campaign across the majority of the Permian in September-November 2019 with imaging spectrometers to quantify strong methane (CH4) point source emissions at facility-scales, including high frequency sampling to evaluate intermittency. We identified 1100 unique and heavy-tailed distributed sources that were sampled at least 3 times (average 8 times), showing 26% average persistence. Sources that were routinely persistent (50-100%) make up only 11% of high emitting infrastructure, but 29% of quantified emissions from this population, potentially indicative of leaking equipment that merits repair. Sector attribution of plumes shows that 50% of detected emissions result from O&G production, 38% from gathering and boosting, and 12% from processing. This suggests a 20% relative shift from upstream to midstream compared to other US O&G basins for large emitters. Simultaneous spectroscopic identification of flares found that 12% of detected Permian CH4 plume emissions were associated with either active or inactive flares. Frequent, high-resolution monitoring is necessary to accurately understand intermittent methane super-emitters across large, heterogeneous O&G basins and to efficiently pin-point persistent leaks for mitigation.
提供机构:
Root
创建时间:
2023-09-14



