Fossil fuel industry methane emissions
hit a near record in 2022, prompting
the International Energy Agency to
demand that companies use their
“windfall” profits to stem leaks of the
potent global warming gas
The latest report from the IEA estimated that the industry was responsible
for 135mn tonnes of methane released
into the atmosphere last year, only
slightly below the record high in 2019.
Methane has accounted for about 30
per cent of the global temperature rise
since the industrial revolution, with the
energy sector making up about a third
of human-induced methane, second
only to agriculture.
Cutting methane emissions is
regarded by climate change experts as
among the cheapest and quickest
opportunities for tackling global warming, as it is more potent than carbon
dioxide but shorter-lived.
Fatih Birol, IEA executive director,
urged policymakers to augment pressure for the energy sector to clean up its
methane pollution, mainly from leakage and distribution. “From our point of
view there is no excuse for oil and gas
industry not to move quickly. And no
excuse for the governments not to step
in and make this happen,” he said.
Oil and gas companies reported a
bumper year in 2022 after Russia’s war
on Ukraine created an energy crisis that
forced Europe to turn to fossil fuels.
Birol said the oil and gas industry’s
income jumped to about $4tn last year,
compared with $1.4tn-$1.5tn in previous years.
“I make the IEA point very clearly: we
would like to see a significant chunk of
this $4tn go into investments into clean
energy transitions, including tackling
methane emissions.”
By investing 3 per cent of oil and gas
companies’ 2022 “windfall income” in
existing technologies, such as leak
detection and repair, methane emissions from the sector could be cut 75 per
cent, he said.
“Tackling methane is one of the most
important, if not the most important
things, that can be done in tackling nearterm global warming,” he added.
The report calculated that, based on
average gas prices from 2017 to 2021,
about 40 per cent of methane leakage
could be stopped at zero net cost
because the price of preventing emissions was below the market value of the
captured gas.
The IEA said about 75 per cent of the
methane wasted each year from oil and
gas operations could be “retained and
brought to market using tried and
tested policies and technologies” — a
volume greater than EU natural gas
imports from Russia before the war on
Ukraine. More than 150 countries have
endorsed a pledge to cut methane emissions by 30 per cent by 2030, including
the US and the United Arab Emirates.
However, China and Russia, among the
biggest emitters, are not signatories to
the agreement struck at the UN COP26
climate summit.
Each day oil and gas operations
around the world released the same
amount of methane as last September’s
Nord Stream explosion, referring to the
damaged pipeline taking gas from Russia to Europe, the IEA said. The report
also found emissions from very large
leaks detected by satellite fell almost
10 per cent in 2022 compared with 2021.