Methane leaking out of the more than 4 million abandoned oil and gas wells in the United States and Canada is a far greater contributor to climate change than government estimates suggest, researchers from McGill University said Jan. 20.
Canada has underestimated methane emissions from its abandoned wells by as much as 150%, while official U.S. estimates are about 20% below actual levels, according to the study published in Environmental Science and Technology.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Environment and Climate Change Canada did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the study.
More than a century of oil and gas drilling has left behind millions of abandoned wells around the globe, posing a serious threat to the climate that governments are only starting to understand, according to a Reuters special report last year.
Methane has more than 80 times the warming potential of CO2 in its first 20 years in the atmosphere.
In 2019, methane emissions from abandoned wells were included for the first time in U.S. and Canadian greenhouse gas inventories submitted to the United Nations.
But the McGill study found there are about 500,000 wells in the United States that are undocumented along with about 60,000 in Canada. It also found that the EPA and ECCC had come up with emissions estimates that were far too low—a conclusion the researchers said was based on their own analysis of emissions levels from different types of abandoned wells in seven U.S. states and two Canadian provinces.
Emissions measurements were also not available from major oil and gas-producing states and provinces like Texas and Alberta, adding to uncertainty around the official data, the study said.
The study was co-authored by McGill professor Mary Kang, who in 2014 was the first to measure methane emissions from old drilling sites in Pennsylvania.
Recommended Reading
TotalEnergies Closes $1.4B Acquisition of Malaysia’s SapuraOMV
2024-12-10 - TotalEnergies acquired SapuraOMV’s main assets in blocks SK408 and SK310, both located offshore Sarawak in Malaysia.
BP, Pulling Back from Renewables, Enters $5.8B JV with JERA
2024-12-09 - The 50-50 joint venture with JERA takes shape as BP pulls back from renewables to focus on higher returns and cash flow generation.
BP Seeks Buyers for US NatGas Pipeline System Stake, Sources Say
2024-12-06 - BP is seeking buyers for a stake in its U.S. natural gas pipeline network, sources say.
Permian EOR Firm Plans Reverse Merger with Coconut Water Brand
2024-12-05 - Roosevelt Resources, which is developing an EOR project in the Texas Permian Basin, aims to go public through a reverse merger.
Vivakor Closes Acquisition of Permian, Eagle Ford Crude Logistics
2024-10-08 - Vivakor purchased Endeavor Crude and related companies, which have a series of long-term strategic partnerships with customers in the Permian Basin, Eagle Ford Shale and Oklahoma’s STACK play.