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Obama's Climate Plan Is Leaking Methane
By Nicholas Cunningham
Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 6, 2014
The Environmental Protection Agency's
new regulations aimed at reducing carbon emissions by 30 percent will no
doubt lead to a cleaner economy. But the road there will be paved with
methane.
By requiring reductions in the energy intensity per
megawatt-hour of electricity generation, utilities will have the ability to
choose from an array of options for how to meet the targets.
Energy
efficiency will likely be the first choice. Renewable energy will certainly
play a big part, as well.
But one of the major ways utilities will
comply with EPA rules is by fuel switching from coal to natural gas. By the
EPA's own estimate, coal generation will decline by 20 percent to 22 percent
by 2020. That will create an opening for natural gas, which could rise by up
to
45 percent, jumping from 22 billion cubic feet per day to 32 bcf/d.
The Obama administration has bet its climate legacy on this trend, which
was already underway before the EPA regulations. This is why the
administration chose 2005 as a baseline, when emissions were near a peak.
2005 predated the shale gas revolution, which led to significant reductions
in carbon dioxide emissions as cheap natural gas displaced coal. By 2013,
the U.S. had already achieved about a 10 percent reduction in emissions
since 2005 – meaning we are already well on our way to the 2030 goal.
Since natural gas burns much cleaner than coal, producing about
half as much carbon dioxide, making the switch from coal to gas can go a
long way to achieving the rest of the remaining reductions, the
administration seems to be thinking.
The big problem is that we
don't know what's happening with methane emissions. Natural gas, which is
essentially methane (CH4), may burn cleaner than coal, but what happens when
it isn't burned? As a greenhouse gas, methane emitted into the atmosphere is
more than 20
times as potent as carbon dioxide over a 100-year period.
Natural gas production leaks methane along its entire supply chain – from
drilling to storing, processing to distributing. The EPA estimates that
methane emissions have
actually
declined over the past 20 years as technology has improved. And this
needs to be true for the EPA's assumptions to work out with its climate
plan.
The problem is that many scientists dispute those claims.
Robert Howarth of
Cornell University believes that methane leakage could be much higher
than the government says, which would mean pushing utilities to switch from
coal to natural gas may not be constructive. He has conducted studies that
conclude methane leakage far exceeds EPA estimates. "Converting to natural
gas plants, which is what this latest rule is likely to do, will actually
aggravate climate change, not make things better,"
Howarth told Bloomberg News. "It's well enough established to suggest
the EPA is on the wrong side of the science."
The natural gas
industry has aggressively pushed back against Howarth's findings, pointing
to
other studies that show lower methane leakage. But the problem is that
the science just isn't all there yet – we don't know exactly how much
methane is leaking. Nevertheless, the Obama administration is ploughing
forward.
In its regulatory analysis for the new carbon rule, the EPA
recognized the methane problem, but has punted on the issue for now. "The
EPA is aware that other GHGs such as nitrous oxide (N2O) (and to a lesser
extent, methane [CH4]) may be emitted from fossil-fuel-fired EGUs…The EPA is
not proposing separate N2O or CH4 guidelines or an equivalent CO2 emission
limit because of a lack of available data for these affected sources," the
report said.
Natural gas may still have a climate benefit over
coal. And even if it doesn't right now, methane leakage could turn out to be
a very fixable problem, as engineers figure out how to plug the leaks in the
supply chain. But for now, President Barack Obama's climate plan hinges on
this uncertainty.
Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Obamas-Climate-Plan-Is-Leaking-Methane.html
By Nicholas Cunningham of Oilprice.com
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