Current:Home > StocksThe Mystery of the Global Methane Rise: Asian Agriculture or U.S. Fracking? -TradeCircle
The Mystery of the Global Methane Rise: Asian Agriculture or U.S. Fracking?
View
Date:2025-04-24 00:57:32
The rise in methane concentration in the atmosphere may reflect the growth of agriculture to feed Asia’s booming population, according to a study published Thursday in the journal Science.
Rice paddies in Southeast Asia and livestock in India and China are probably behind the increase, according to researchers. The study was led by Hinrich Schaefer, an atmospheric scientist at the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research in Wellington, New Zealand. The findings were based on a chemical analysis of methane in the atmosphere.
Other scientists, however, challenged the results, arguing that the fracking-driven U.S. oil and gas boom is more likely to be the cause. Scientists have been trying to discover why methane levels in the atmosphere started rising in 2007 after holding steady for nearly a decade. As a greenhouse gas, methane is 84 times more potent than carbon dioxide over 20 years. Reducing methane emissions is considered crucial to slowing global warming.
“If we want to get serious about reducing methane emissions, we now know better where we have to start working,” Schaefer said.
The study focused on unique isotopic signatures of methane from different sources. Methane from natural gas leaks in oil and gas production, for example, has a different signature from methane generated by bacteria in a cow’s stomach or similar methane-producing bacteria found in rice paddies or other wetlands. The different signatures are based on the ratio of carbon-12 to carbon-13, two forms of carbon that are in methane. This ratio varies from source to source, allowing researchers to make inferences about the origins of the gas.
“If you see changes in the carbon-12 to carbon-13 ratio of methane in the atmosphere, you can draw conclusions about how different methane sources change over time,” Schaefer said.
Other scientists, however, said that analysis is too simplistic.
“When you have eight or nine or 10 different sources of methane, each with a range of ratios, there is no way to calculate where it is coming from,” said Robert Howarth, a Cornell University professor who studies methane emissions. “If you had a little bit of melting of permafrost and a big increase in natural gas production, you could get a pattern that these people are interpreting as cows in India.”
The study also drew on previously published research based on satellite data that suggested the region including India, China and Southeast Asia was the source of increased emissions. The combined information led the researchers to conclude that the additional emissions were from agriculture, not from oil and gas or melting permafrost.
Daniel Jacob, a professor of atmospheric chemistry and environmental engineering at Harvard University, questioned how such a large increase could come from livestock in Asia.
“You could say we have more livestock because we have more people to feed and people eat more meat, but you look at the increase in the number of head of livestock, and that doesn’t really account for the increase in methane,” he said.
Jacob co-authored a separate study based on satellite data and surface observations last month in the academic journal Geophysical Research Letters. The study found that U.S. methane emissions could account for 30 to 60 percent of the global growth of atmospheric methane over the past decade.
Jacob’s work doesn’t pinpoint the source of the emissions but suggests leaks from the oil and gas industry may be the cause. The study notes that other researchers have recently observed increases in atmospheric concentrations of ethane. Ethane is a component of natural gas. If both methane and ethane are rising, natural gas is likely the source, Jacob said.
A peer-reviewed, satellite-based study published in 2014 found a significant increase in methane emissions from North Dakota and Texas where oil and gas production from the Bakken and Eagle Ford formations had been expanding rapidly. The study provides further evidence that the methane increase is from the oil and gas industry, Howarth said.
If the magnitude of the recent increase in U.S. emissions is correct, that would call into question the conclusion that agriculture in Asia is responsible, Jacob said.
“Thirty to 60 percent leaves room for something else, but still, that could be a tall order,” Jacob said. “The jury is still out.”
veryGood! (1)
Related
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Iowa State RB Jirehl Brock, three other starters charged in gambling investigation
- Ecuador arrests 6 Colombians in slaying of presidential candidate as violence weighs on nation
- Mason Crosby is kicking from boat, everywhere else to remind NFL teams he still has it
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- 41 reportedly dead after migrant boat capsizes off Italian island
- Paramore cancels remaining US tour dates amid Hayley Williams' lung infection
- Pink baby! Fan goes into labor at Boston concert, walks to hospital to give birth to boy
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- 'Transportation disaster' strands Kentucky students for hours, cancels school 2 days
Ranking
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- UN Security Council to hold first open meeting on North Korea human rights situation since 2017
- A Georgia teacher wants to overturn her firing for reading a book to students about gender identity
- Fashion Nova shoppers to get refunds after settlement: How to file a claim
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- New ferry linking El Salvador and Costa Rica aims to cut shipping times, avoid border problems
- US government sanctions Russians on the board of Alfa Group in response to war in Ukraine
- Nick Kyrgios pulls out of US Open, missing all four Grand Slam events in 2023
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Top Chef Host Kristen Kish Shares the 8-In-1 Must-Have That Makes Cooking So Much Easier
Prosecutors say a California judge charged in his wife’s killing had 47 weapons in his house
Iraq bans the word homosexual on all media platforms and offers an alternative
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
North Carolina roller coaster reopens after a large crack launched a state investigation
The Complicated Aftermath of Anne Heche's Death
Iowa motorist found not guilty in striking of pedestrian abortion-rights protester