Methane: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "= Emissions = == Turtle Island == === Underreporting === State and federal regulators rely on the oil and gas industry to detect and report its own methane emissions. Independent researches have shown using thermal imaging that in many locations, leaks are five times greater than the industry reports.<ref>https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/the-challenge-of-tracking-methane-emissions-and-why-they-are-higher-than-publicly-reported</ref> === The Permian Basin === <b...")
 
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=== The Permian Basin ===
=== The Permian Basin ===


<blockquote>We are harming the entire planet and every person and every living thing on it by what we are doing here in Texas. And we call this a climate bomb.</blockquote> - Sharon Wilson, [[Earthworks]]
<blockquote>We are harming the entire planet and every person and every living thing on it by what we are doing here in Texas. And we call this a [[climate bomb]].</blockquote> - Sharon Wilson, [[Earthworks]]


The [[Permian Basin]] is currently the largest methane emitting oil and gas basin in the U.S. The extent and intensity of its shale [[fracking]] is releasing massive invisible plumes of methane, seemingly "everywhere." Flying over the Permian Basin with a spectrometer, the nonprofit [[Carbon Mapper]] found 1,100 super emitters of methane there.<ref>https://climatewiki.earth/wiki/index.php?title=Methane&action=edit&redlink=1</ref>
The [[Permian Basin]] is currently the largest methane emitting oil and gas basin in the U.S. The extent and intensity of its shale [[fracking]] is releasing massive invisible plumes of methane, seemingly "everywhere." Flying over the Permian Basin with a spectrometer, the nonprofit [[Carbon Mapper]] found 1,100 super emitters of methane there.<ref>https://climatewiki.earth/wiki/index.php?title=Methane&action=edit&redlink=1</ref>

Revision as of 23:13, 25 November 2022

Emissions

Turtle Island

Underreporting

State and federal regulators rely on the oil and gas industry to detect and report its own methane emissions. Independent researches have shown using thermal imaging that in many locations, leaks are five times greater than the industry reports.[1]

The Permian Basin

We are harming the entire planet and every person and every living thing on it by what we are doing here in Texas. And we call this a climate bomb.

- Sharon Wilson, Earthworks

The Permian Basin is currently the largest methane emitting oil and gas basin in the U.S. The extent and intensity of its shale fracking is releasing massive invisible plumes of methane, seemingly "everywhere." Flying over the Permian Basin with a spectrometer, the nonprofit Carbon Mapper found 1,100 super emitters of methane there.[2]