Authors
Stefan Schwietzke, Gabrielle Pétron, Stephen Conley, Cody Pickering, Ingrid Mielke-Maday, Edward J Dlugokencky, Pieter P Tans, Tim Vaughn, Clay Bell, Daniel Zimmerle, Sonja Wolter, Clark W King, Allen B White, Timothy Coleman, Laura Bianco, Russell C Schnell
Publication date
2017/6/20
Journal
Environmental Science & Technology
Volume
51
Issue
12
Pages
7286-7294
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Description
Divergence in recent oil and gas related methane emission estimates between aircraft studies (basin total for a midday window) and emissions inventories (annualized regional and national statistics) indicate the need for better understanding the experimental design, including temporal and spatial alignment and interpretation of results. Our aircraft-based methane emission estimates in a major U.S. shale gas basin resolved from west to east show (i) similar spatial distributions for 2 days, (ii) strong spatial correlations with reported NG production (R2 = 0.75) and active gas well pad count (R2 = 0.81), and (iii) 2× higher emissions in the western half (normalized by gas production) despite relatively homogeneous dry gas and well characteristics. Operator reported hourly activity data show that midday episodic emissions from manual liquid unloadings (a routine operation in this basin and elsewhere) could explain ∼1 …
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