Study finds climate-changing methane emissions from oilpatch twice as high as thought
A newly published study concludes that emissions of a potent greenhouse gas from oil and gas production are twice as high as previously thought.
The research by Environment Canada scientists says previous measurements weren’t accounting for all sources of methane, a climate-changing gas about 30 times more powerful than carbon dioxide.
Lead author Doug Worthy says methane estimates in Canada’s national inventory will have to be increased as a result of the findings.
The paper was published days after the federal government, Alberta and Saskatchewan signed agreements on reducing methane.