EGU21-6590
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6590
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Meter-scale retrieval of industrial methane emissions using GHGSat’s satellite constellation

Mathias Strupler1, Hanford Deglint1, David Gains1, Dylan Jervis1, Jean-Philippe MacLean1, Jason McKeever1, Antoine Ramier1, Warren Shaw1, Ewan Tarrant1, Daniel Varon1,2, and David Young1
Mathias Strupler et al.
  • 1GHGSat, Montreal, Canada (info@ghgsat.com)
  • 2School of Engineering and Applied Science, Harvard University, Cambridge, 02138, United States

Actionable feedback to industrial operators is extremely valuable to help them reduce their greenhouse gas emissions. With this goal in mind, GHGSat launched in 2016 a demonstration satellite called GHGSat-D (“Claire”). It was the first satellite built specifically to detect and quantify methane emissions from individual sites.

With the launches of GHGSat-C1 (“Iris”) in September 2020 and of GHGSat-C2 (“Hugo”) planned in January 2021, GHGSat will have three methane-sensing meter-scale resolution satellites in orbit. In addition to those satellites, GHGSat has also deployed an aircraft version of the instrument to survey specific areas with even lower detection threshold thanks to its higher spatial resolution.

This presentation will show the improvements done since GHGSat-D that allow our instruments to reach column precision of  1% of background. With this enhanced sensitivity, sources such as oil and gas facilities, mines, landfills and dams can be measured from space. Emission quantification of various sources will be presented and will demonstrate that GHGSat-C1 is approaching its target detection threshold of 100 kg/h. We will also illustrate the complementarity of GHGSat’s instruments with Sentinel-5P, the first ones able to detect individual sources with low emission rates, the second able to measure daily and with high accuracy global methane concentrations. We will also discuss the data calibration and validation plan of our instruments. Finally, an update on the future expansion of GHGSat’s constellation will be given.

How to cite: Strupler, M., Deglint, H., Gains, D., Jervis, D., MacLean, J.-P., McKeever, J., Ramier, A., Shaw, W., Tarrant, E., Varon, D., and Young, D.: Meter-scale retrieval of industrial methane emissions using GHGSat’s satellite constellation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6590, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6590, 2021.

Corresponding displays formerly uploaded have been withdrawn.