4.7 Article

Unravelling a large methane emission discrepancy in Mexico using satellite observations

Journal

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
Volume 260, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2021.112461

Keywords

Methane; TROPOMI; Greenhouse gas; Mexico

Funding

  1. High Meadows Research Fellowship at EDF
  2. Robertson Foundation
  3. NASA Carbon Monitoring System [80NSSC18K0178]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42007198]
  5. foundation of Westlake University

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Using TROPOMI satellite observations, a study found significantly higher methane emissions from the oil and gas sector in eastern Mexico compared to previous estimates, particularly from the southern onshore basin. This suggests the need for stronger mitigation measures to reduce the anthropogenic methane emissions footprint, especially from the oil and gas industry in Mexico.
We use satellite observations from the Tropospheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) to map and quantify methane emissions from eastern Mexico using an atmospheric inverse analysis. Eastern Mexico covers the vast majority of the national oil and gas production. Using TROPOMI measurements from May 2018 to December 2019, our methane emission estimates for eastern Mexico are 5.0 +/- 0.2 Tg a-1 for anthropogenic sources and 1.5 +/- 0.1 Tg a-1 for natural sources, representing 45% and 34% higher annual methane fluxes respectively compared to the most recent estimates based on the Mexican national greenhouse gas inventory. Our results show that Mexico's oil and gas sector has the largest discrepancy, with oil and gas emissions (1.3 +/- 0.2 Tg a-1) higher by a factor of two relative to bottom-up estimates-accounting for a quarter of total anthropogenic emissions. Our satellite-based inverse modeling estimates show that more than half of the oil/gas emissions in eastern Mexico are from the southern onshore basin (0.79 +/- 0.13 Tg a-1), pointing at high emission sources which are not represented in current bottom-up inventories (e.g., venting of associated gas, high-emitting gathering/processing facilities related to the transport of associated gas from offshore). These findings suggest that stronger mitigation measures are critical to curbing the anthropogenic footprint of methane emissions in Mexico, especially the large contribution from the oil and gas sector.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available