EGU26-14127, updated on 14 Mar 2026
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14127
EGU General Assembly 2026
© Author(s) 2026. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Oral | Tuesday, 05 May, 14:36–14:39 (CEST)
 
vPoster spot 5
Poster | Tuesday, 05 May, 16:15–18:00 (CEST), Display time Tuesday, 05 May, 14:00–18:00
 
vPoster Discussion, vP.13
From Detection to Mitigation: The California Satellite Methane Project
Daniel Phillips, Emily Yang, Jason Schroeder, Stephen Zelinka, Isis Frausto-Vicencio, Dorothy Fibiger, and Jorn Herner
Daniel Phillips et al.
  • California Air Resources Board, Research Division, United States of America (daniel.phillips@arb.ca.gov)

Past aerial hyperspectral mapping campaigns and pilot studies have demonstrated that highly concentrated plumes are a significant portion of California’s total methane emissions, including many unintentional leaks that can be fixed quickly when operators are notified. Satellite plume imagers such as Planet’s Tanager offer the capacity for repeated observations of known methane infrastructure, with enough spatial resolution and sensitivity to address a significant fraction of these leaks by identifying source facilities and contacting operators. Here we present system design and first results from the California Satellite Methane Project (CalSMP), a comprehensive multi-sector effort to notify individual operators of plumes within days of detection and ensure prompt mitigation when possible through a mix of direct regulation and voluntary dialogue with operators.

In May 2025, CARB began retrieving low-latency Tanager plume detections purchased from Carbon Mapper. Using a cloud-based system developed in-house, CARB employees oversee a semi-automated process to assign plumes to a source and facilitate information exchange with operators. The system generates a notification email with instructions and response forms tailored to the specific facility type (e.g. landfill, oil and gas, dairy biogas). These responses allow us to categorize emissions across sectors by emission type (e.g. unintentional, temporary, process) as well as identify sector-specific components or infrastructure (landfill gas collection system, gas well stuffing box) and details of any repairs.

CARB plans to expand its spatiotemporal coverage through additional satellites, with increased automation as we scale up. While the project’s initial focus is direct repair of unintentional leaks, operator responses also effectively survey underlying causes of point-source emissions and can inform future efforts to improve industry operational practices. CARB has dedicated community outreach funds to ensure methane observations are accessible, understandable, and useful to communities, and is committed to sharing technical details, project design, and lessons learned with other jurisdictions to maximize global mitigation efforts.

How to cite: Phillips, D., Yang, E., Schroeder, J., Zelinka, S., Frausto-Vicencio, I., Fibiger, D., and Herner, J.: From Detection to Mitigation: The California Satellite Methane Project, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14127, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14127, 2026.