Science & technology | Climate change

Targeting methane “ultra-emitters” could cheaply slow climate change

Patching up leaky oil-and-gas works across the world would be a good place to start

ON FEBRUARY 15TH 2018 a gas well blew up in Ohio’s Belmont county. Flying overhead shortly before 1pm, a state highway-patrol helicopter captured images of a column of flames and a billowing plume of soot and gases rising high into the sky from the rolling hills. Although the flames were soon put out, the bust wellhead was not patched up for 20 days. A subsequent study using satellite data calculated that during that time, some 58,000 tonnes of methane was released, equivalent to one-quarter of what Ohio’s entire oil-and-gas infrastructure reportedly produces every year and more than the annual methane emissions of similar fossil-fuel infrastructure in most European countries.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Methane mission”

How high will interest rates go?

From the February 5th 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Science & technology

Heart with a face holding up weights in each hand

Should you start lifting weights?

You’ll stay healthier for longer if you’re strong

A person sleeping. The frame is split between night and day.

Does melatonin work for jet lag?

It can help. But it depends where you’re going


A network of pixelated hearts

Training AI models might not need enormous data centres

Eventually, models could be trained without any dedicated hardware at all


How the Gulf’s rulers want to harness the power of science

A stronger R&D base, they hope, will transform their countries’ economies. Will their plan work?

Cancer vaccines are showing promise at last

Trials are under way against skin, brain and lung tumours

New firefighting tech is being trialled in Sardinia’s ancient forests

It could sniff out blazes long before they spread out of control