REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

A few “problem wells” source of greenhouse gas

POSTED BY: 1KIKI
UPDATED: Tuesday, April 15, 2014 23:43
SHORT URL:
VIEWED: 518
PAGE 1 of 1

Tuesday, April 15, 2014 11:43 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


http://www.rdmag.com/news/2014/04/few-%E2%80%9Cproblem-wells%E2%80%9D-
source-greenhouse-gas?et_cid=3884176&et_rid=366206770&type=headline


A few “problem wells” source of greenhouse gas



A well pad in southwestern Pennsylvania. A Purdue and Cornell study found high levels of the greenhouse gas methane above shale gas wells during the drilling stage—a production point not thought to be a significant emissions source. Image: Dana Caulton



High levels of the greenhouse gas methane were found above shale gas wells at a production point not thought to be an important emissions source, according to a study jointly led by Purdue and Cornell universities. The findings could have implications for the evaluation of the environmental impacts from natural gas production.

The study, which is one of only a few to use a so-called "top-down" approach that measures methane gas levels in the air above wells, identified seven individual well pads with high emission levels and established their stage in the shale-gas development process.

The high-emitting wells made up less than 1% of the total number of wells in the area and were all found to be in the drilling stage, a preproduction stage not previously associated with significant emissions.

"These findings present a possible weakness in the current methods to inventory methane emissions and the top-down approach clearly represents an important complementary method that could be added to better define the impacts of shale gas development," said Paul Shepson, a prof. of chemistry and earth atmospheric and planetary sciences at Purdue who co-led the study with Jed Sparks, a prof. of ecology and evolutionary biology at Cornell. "This small fraction of the total number of wells was contributing a much larger large portion of the total emissions in the area, and the emissions for this stage were not represented in the current inventories."

The researchers flew above the Marcellus shale formation in southwestern Pennsylvania in the Purdue Airborne Laboratory for Atmospheric Research, a specially equipped airplane. The aircraft-based approach allowed researchers to identify plumes of methane gas from single well pads, groups of well pads and larger regional scales and to examine the production state of the wells.

"It is particularly noteworthy that large emissions were measured for wells in the drilling phase, in some cases 100 to 1,000 times greater than the inventory estimates," Shepson said. "This indicates that there are processes occurring—for example, emissions from coal seams during the drilling process—that are not captured in the inventory development process. This is another example pointing to the idea that a large fraction of the total emissions is coming from a small fraction of shale gas production components that are in an anomalous condition."

The bottom-up inventories have been produced from industry measurements of emissions from individual production, transmission and distribution components and then scaling up to create an estimate of emissions for the region. However, with thousands of wells, and a complex processing and transmission system associated with each shale basin, obtaining a representative data set is difficult, he said.

A paper detailing the results is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"We need to develop a way to objectively measure emissions from shale gas development that includes the full range of operator types, equipment states and engineering approaches," Shepson said. "A whole-systems approach to measurement is needed to understand exactly what is occurring."

Source: Purdue Univ.


NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

YOUR OPTIONS

NEW POSTS TODAY

USERPOST DATE

OTHER TOPICS

DISCUSSIONS
In the garden, and RAIN!!! (2)
Mon, October 27, 2025 13:55 - 6222 posts
Do you feel like the winds of change are blowing today too?
Mon, October 27, 2025 13:40 - 3721 posts
Russia Invades Ukraine. Again
Mon, October 27, 2025 12:35 - 9171 posts
Trump Is Destroying Everything He Touches
Mon, October 27, 2025 12:25 - 818 posts
Ghosts
Mon, October 27, 2025 12:15 - 83 posts
Trump
Mon, October 27, 2025 11:54 - 14 posts
In the garden, and RAIN!!!!
Mon, October 27, 2025 11:29 - 11674 posts
Countdown to Trumps 2026 Impeachment.
Mon, October 27, 2025 11:06 - 132 posts
A thread for Democrats Only
Mon, October 27, 2025 09:50 - 7134 posts
TRUMP???????????????
Mon, October 27, 2025 09:49 - 26 posts
Movies From a Single Character's Perspective... (A novel concept and a great YouTube Channel)
Mon, October 27, 2025 08:13 - 6 posts
Music II
Mon, October 27, 2025 08:10 - 485 posts

FFF.NET SOCIAL