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Wednesday, 26 October 2016
Australia's coal seam gas emissions may be vastly underestimated – report
Report says industry’s true carbon emissions could easily amount to twice the emissions Australia promised to cut by 2030
Gas accidentally released directly to the air during extraction or
transportation, in what are called ‘fugitive emissions’, could swamp the
benefits of gas over coal.
Photograph: Reuters
The coal-seam-gas industry could be vastly underestimating its
emissions, jeopardising Australia’s commitments made at Paris and
swamping any benefits gas has over coal, according to a landmark report
by the Melbourne Energy Institute, commissioned by the Australia
Institute.
The report found the industry’s true emissions could easily amount to twice the emissions Australia has promised to cut by 2030.
While no studies in Australia have examined emissions from methane
escaping directly into the atmosphere, in the US those measurements show
it is often 170 times higher than that claimed by the Australian
industry and 34 times higher than that what the Australian government
reported to the UN.
“We’re potentially not measuring the equivalent of the emissions from
our entire transport sector,” said Mark Ogge, principal advisor at the
Australia Institute.
“If the emissions are a lot more than what is being estimated now, it
could jeopardise our commitments made at Paris,” said report author Tim
Forcey from the Melbourne Energy Institute.
Gas has been spruiked as the lower-emissions fossil fuel since, when
burned, it emits 60% less carbon dioxide than coal for each unit of
energy produced.
But unburned gas – mostly made up of methane – is a much more
powerful greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, exerting a warming
influence 84 times that of carbon dioxide over a 20-year time frame.
As a result, gas accidentally released directly to the air during
extraction or transportation, in what are called “fugitive emissions”,
could swamp the benefits of gas over coal.
According to research compiled by experts at the Melbourne Energy
Institute, when fugitive emissions reach 3.2% of the overall gas
produced, gas loses its edge over coal.
While there have been no reliable studies of the actual fugitive
emissions in the Australian coal-seam-gas industry, the industry itself
claims they amount to only 0.1% of the gas produced. That figure was
used in the environmental impact statements used to get approval for the
huge gas liquefaction plants recently built in Gladstone.
But when the government reported to the UNFCCC on Australia’s total
emissions in 2014, it assumed fugitive emissions were five times higher
than that suggested by the industry, at 0.5% of gas produced.
However, studies of unconventional gas – shale and coal seam gas – in
the US have found fugitive emissions are often as much as 17% of the
gas produced.
Since Australian coal seam gas is closer to the surface, the
researchers said it was likely that Australian fugitive emissions are
even higher. In one US region, fugitive emissions from coal seam gas
were 30% – 300 times that assumed by the industry in Australia.
If fugitive emissions in Australia were just 10% of the total gas
produced, then in 2014, Australia’s fugitive emissions would have
amounted to twice the amount of greenhouse gases Australia has committed
to cut from its emissions by 2030, or the equivalent of the whole
transport sector.
Moreover, that figure is set to grow significantly. Between 2013 and
2017, Australia is projected to triple its gas production in the eastern
states, mostly in order to service the liquefied natural gas export
industry. There are currently 6,000 wells in eastern Australia servicing
that industry, a figure expected to grow to at least 20-fold in the
next 20 years.
“Methane is a very powerful greenhouse gas, which means that
controlling methane emissions is crucial to meeting climate targets and
avoiding tipping points,” said Forcey.
For some aspects of gas production, emissions reported to the UNFCCC
were said to be zero, despite there being a likelihood of very large
leaks from those sources.
The report said the government relied on one study to claim several
processes had no fugitive emissions, despite that report explicitly
acknowledging large leaks that it wasn’t able to properly measure,
because the measuring equipment was being overwhelmed by gas leaking
from other sources – including sources assumed to have no emissions when
Australia reports to the UNFCCC.
“It would have been like being in a hurricane and being asked to measure the water coming from a leaking tap,” said Forcey.
This year, the UNFCCC urged Australia to improve its measuring of fugitive emissions.
In light of the growing industry, the new report called for fugitive
emissions to be independently verified by a regulatory body funded by a
levy on the industry.
And since one of the difficulties in measuring methane emissions was a
lack of baseline studies, the report called for compulsory baseline
methane measurements in any area being considered for oil and gas
development.
Within about five years, Australia is expected to overtake Qatar as
the biggest exporter of liquefied natural gas, much of which will be
produced from CSG wells in the eastern states. In 2021, both Qatar and
Australia will export roughly the same amount of gas. But because of generous tax breaks to the fossil fuel industry, Fairfax Media reported this month that Qatar will receive $26.6bn in tax revenue, while Australia will receive less than $1bn.
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