Ground-Based Mobile Measurements to Track Urban Methane Emissions from Natural Gas in 12 Cities across Eight Countries

F. Vogel, S. Ars, D. Wunch, J. Lavoie, L. Gillespie, H. Maazallahi, T. Röckmann, J. Nęcki, J. Bartyzel, P. Jagoda, D. Lowry, J. France, J. Fernandez, S. Bakkaloglu, R. Fisher, M. Lanoiselle, H. Chen, M. Oudshoorn, C. Yver-Kwok, S. DefratykaJ. A. Morgui, C. Estruch, R. Curcoll, C. Grossi, J. Chen, F. Dietrich, A. Forstmaier, H. A.C. Denier van der Gon, S. N.C. Dellaert, J. Salo, M. Corbu, S. S. Iancu, A. S. Tudor, A. I. Scarlat, A. Calcan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

To mitigate methane emission from urban natural gas distribution systems, it is crucial to understand local leak rates and occurrence rates. To explore urban methane emissions in cities outside the U.S., where significant emissions were found previously, mobile measurements were performed in 12 cities across eight countries. The surveyed cities range from medium size, like Groningen, NL, to large size, like Toronto, CA, and London, UK. Furthermore, this survey spanned across European regions from Barcelona, ES, to Bucharest, RO. The joint analysis of all data allows us to focus on general emission behavior for cities with different infrastructure and environmental conditions. We find that all cities have a spectrum of small, medium, and large methane sources in their domain. The emission rates found follow a heavy-tailed distribution, and the top 10% of emitters account for 60-80% of total emissions, which implies that strategic repair planning could help reduce emissions quickly. Furthermore, we compare our findings with inventory estimates for urban natural gas-related methane emissions from this sector in Europe. While cities with larger reported emissions were found to generally also have larger observed emissions, we find clear discrepancies between observation-based and inventory-based emission estimates for our 12 cities.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2271-2281
Number of pages11
JournalEnvironmental Science and Technology
Volume58
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 6 Feb 2024

Keywords

  • cities
  • greenhouse gas mitigation
  • methane
  • mobile surveys
  • natural gas

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