The MethaneSAT sattelite will add to a growing fleet of
spacecraft in orbit that are meant to help fight climate change
by publishing data on emissions of the invisible but potent
greenhouse gas.
While the European Space Agency and another satellite-based
tracker called GHGSat are already providing methane emissions
data, MethaneSAT will provide more detail and have a much wider
field of view, its backers say.
The Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) said the data will bring
accountability to the more than 50 oil and gas companies that
pledged at the Dubai COP28 climate summit in December to zero
out methane and eliminate routine gas flaring, and help those
preparing to comply with forthcoming methane regulations in the
EU and the U.S., including a methane pollution fee.
"We'll be able to see who the laggards are, but hopefully they
will use that information in a constructive way to improve their
performance," said Mark Brownstein, senior vice president for
energy transition at EDF.
MethaneSAT was developed in conjunction with the New Zealand
Space Agency and Harvard University, among others, and its data
will be available to the public later this year, EDF said.
Google Cloud will provide the computing capabilities to process
the information.
Methane emissions - which come from oil and natural gas
production, agricultural waste, and landfills - are many times
more potent than carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas.
Oil industry group the American Petroleum Institute said
emissions data from third parties should not be used for
regulatory purposes without verification.
"The environmental regulator is still going to be paramount here
as the authority in terms of validating the data,” said Aaron
Padilla, API vice president of corporate policy.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; additional reporting by Nichola
Groom in Los Angeles; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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