COP27: U.N. to hunt sources of climate-warming methane from space
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[November 11, 2022]
By Richard Valdmanis
SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt (Reuters) - The
U.N.’s environment watchdog said on Friday it will launch a public
database of global methane leaks detected by space satellites - part of
a new program to encourage companies and governments to curb emissions
of the powerful greenhouse gas.
The system, dubbed MARS or Methane Alert and Response System, will build
on a pledge signed by 119 countries since last year to cut methane
emissions by 30% this decade, a goal scientists say is crucial to
averting extreme climate change.
"The Methane Alert and Response System is a big step in helping
governments and companies deliver on this important, short-term climate
goal," Inger Andersen, executive eirector of the U.N. Environment
Program, said in a statement issued at the COP27 climate summit in
Egypt.
"Reducing methane emissions can make a big and rapid difference, as this
gas leaves the atmosphere far quicker than carbon dioxide."
Methane, which has a much higher warming effect than carbon dioxide
during its short lifespan, is responsible for about a quarter of the
global rise in temperatures so far, scientists say.
The MARS system will rely on an existing network of space satellites to
spot methane plumes around the globe, estimate how big they are, and
identify the company or government responsible, UNEP said.
UNEP’s International Methane Emissions Observatory will then share
information about the leak with whoever is responsible in the hope they
will find the cause of the leak and repair it.
After a period of 45-75 days, the observatory will release information
about the leak, and the company or government response to it, to the
public database, UNEP said.
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Messages on methane gas and carbon
dioxide emissions are projected onto the United Nations building
ahead of the climate change talks that will take place on the
sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly, in New York September 20,
2014. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
The system will first focus on global oil and gas operations, among
the biggest sources of methane, before gradually expanding to cover
other industries like coal, waste, livestock, and rice.
The initiative will be funded in part by the United States and
European Union governments, along with philanthropic organizations
including Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’ Bezos Earth Fund and the Global
Methane Hub, UNEP said.
U.S. Special Climate Envoy John Kerry, who helped spearhead the
Global Methane Pledge to cut methane emissions last year, called the
new system "critical" to climate efforts.
"Cutting methane is the fastest opportunity to reduce warming and
keep 1.5°C within reach, and this new alert and response system is
going to be a critical tool for helping all of us deliver on the
Global Methane Pledge," he said.
At COP27, the United States and the EU are also set to make public a
joint agreement to step up methane reduction efforts from the fossil
fuel sector, and are hoping other nations will sign on.
For daily comprehensive coverage on COP27 in your inbox, sign up for
the Reuters Sustainable Switch newsletter here
(Writing by Richard Valdmanis; Editing by Katy Daigle and Barbara
Lewis)
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