Four corners: The largest US methane anomaly viewed from space

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Abstract

Methane (CH 4) is a potent greenhouse gas and ozone precursor. Quantifying methane emissions is critical for projecting and mitigating changes to climate and air quality. Here we present CH 4 observations made from space combined with Earth-based remote sensing column measurements. Results indicate the largest anomalous CH 4 levels viewable from space over the conterminous U.S. are located at the Four Corners region in the Southwest U.S. Emissions exceeding inventory estimates, totaling 0.59 Tg CH 4 /yr [0.50-0.67; 2σ], are necessary to bring high-resolution simulations and observations into agreement. This underestimated source approaches 10% of the EPA estimate of total U.S. CH 4 emissions from natural gas. The persistence of this CH 4 signal from 2003 onward indicates that the source is likely from established gas, coal, and coalbed methane mining and processing. This work demonstrates that space-based observations can identify anomalous CH 4 emission source regions and quantify their emissions with the use of a transport model. Key Points Four Corners exhibits largest CH 4 anomaly seen from spaceEmissions of >0.5 Tg CH 4 /yr have persisted since 2003Space- and ground-based CH 4 identify missing emissions from fossil fuel extraction

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Kort, E. A., Frankenberg, C., Costigan, K. R., Lindenmaier, R., Dubey, M. K., & Wunch, D. (2014). Four corners: The largest US methane anomaly viewed from space. Geophysical Research Letters, 41(19), 6898–6903. https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GL061503

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