Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/10745
Authors: Schwietzke, Stefan* 
Sherwood, Owen A.* 
Bruhwiler, Lori M P* 
Miller, John B* 
Etiope, Giuseppe* 
Dlugokencky, Edward J.* 
Michel, Sylvia Englund* 
Arling, Victoria A.* 
Vaughn, Bruce H* 
White, James W C* 
Tans, Pieter P* 
Title: Upward revision of global fossil fuel methane emissions based on isotope database
Journal: Nature 
Series/Report no.: /538 (2016)
Issue Date: 2016
DOI: 10.1038/nature19797
Abstract: Methane has the second-largest global radiative forcing impact of anthropogenic greenhouse gases after carbon dioxide, but our understanding of the global atmospheric methane budget is incomplete. The global fossil fuel industry (production and usage of natural gas, oil and coal) is thought to contribute 15 to 22 per cent of methane emissions to the total atmospheric methane budget. However, questions remain regarding methane emission trends as a result of fossil fuel industrial activity and the contribution to total methane emissions of sources from the fossil fuel industry and from natural geological seepage, which are often co-located. Here we re-evaluate the global methane budget and the contribution of the fossil fuel industry to methane emissions based on long-term global methane and methane carbon isotope records. We compile the largest isotopic methane source signature database so far, including fossil fuel, microbial and biomass-burning methane emission sources. We find that total fossil fuel methane emissions (fossil fuel industry plus natural geological seepage) are not increasing over time, but are 60 to 110 per cent greater than current estimates owing to large revisions in isotope source signatures. We show that this is consistent with the observed global latitudinal methane gradient. After accounting for natural geological methane seepage, we find that methane emissions from natural gas, oil and coal production and their usage are 20 to 60 per cent greater than inventories. Our findings imply a greater potential for the fossil fuel industry to mitigate anthropogenic climate forcing, but we also find that methane emissions from natural gas as a fraction of production have declined from approximately 8 per cent to approximately 2 per cent over the past three decades.
Appears in Collections:Article published / in press

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat Existing users please Login
Schwietzke et al 2016 Nature.pdf413.81 kBAdobe PDF
Show full item record

WEB OF SCIENCETM
Citations 50

187
checked on Feb 10, 2021

Page view(s)

61
checked on Apr 24, 2024

Download(s)

5
checked on Apr 24, 2024

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric