Relevant methane emission to the atmosphere from a geological gas manifestation

Abstract Quantifying natural geological sources of methane (CH4) allows to improve the assessment of anthropogenic emissions to the atmosphere from fossil fuel industries. The global CH4 flux of geological gas is, however, an object of debate. Recent fossil (14C-free) CH4 measurements in preindustri...

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Main Authors: Adriano Mazzini, Alessandra Sciarra, Giuseppe Etiope, Pankaj Sadavarte, Sander Houweling, Sudhanshu Pandey, Alwi Husein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-02-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-83369-9
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spelling doaj-c43dd31fc20e4ac58641c3754b01e0642021-02-21T12:31:23ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-02-0111111010.1038/s41598-021-83369-9Relevant methane emission to the atmosphere from a geological gas manifestationAdriano Mazzini0Alessandra Sciarra1Giuseppe Etiope2Pankaj Sadavarte3Sander Houweling4Sudhanshu Pandey5Alwi Husein6Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics (CEED), University of OsloIstituto Nazionale di Geofisica e VulcanologiaIstituto Nazionale di Geofisica e VulcanologiaSRON Netherlands Institute for Space Research, Earth Science Group (ESG)SRON Netherlands Institute for Space Research, Earth Science Group (ESG)SRON Netherlands Institute for Space Research, Earth Science Group (ESG)Pusat Pengendalian Lumpur Sidoarjo (PPLS)Abstract Quantifying natural geological sources of methane (CH4) allows to improve the assessment of anthropogenic emissions to the atmosphere from fossil fuel industries. The global CH4 flux of geological gas is, however, an object of debate. Recent fossil (14C-free) CH4 measurements in preindustrial-era ice cores suggest very low global geological emissions (~ 1.6 Tg year−1), implying a larger fossil fuel industry source. This is however in contrast with previously published bottom-up and top-down geo-emission estimates (~ 45 Tg year−1) and even regional-scale emissions of ~ 1–2 Tg year−1. Here we report on significant geological CH4 emissions from the Lusi hydrothermal system (Indonesia), measured by ground-based and satellite (TROPOMI) techniques. Both techniques indicate a total CH4 output of ~ 0.1 Tg year−1, equivalent to the minimum value of global geo-emission derived by ice core 14CH4 estimates. Our results are consistent with the order of magnitude of the emission factors of large seeps used in global bottom-up estimates, and endorse a substantial contribution from natural Earth’s CH4 degassing. The preindustrial ice core assessments of geological CH4 release may be underestimated and require further study. Satellite measurements can help to test geological CH4 emission factors and explain the gap between the contrasting estimates.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-83369-9
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adriano Mazzini
Alessandra Sciarra
Giuseppe Etiope
Pankaj Sadavarte
Sander Houweling
Sudhanshu Pandey
Alwi Husein
spellingShingle Adriano Mazzini
Alessandra Sciarra
Giuseppe Etiope
Pankaj Sadavarte
Sander Houweling
Sudhanshu Pandey
Alwi Husein
Relevant methane emission to the atmosphere from a geological gas manifestation
Scientific Reports
author_facet Adriano Mazzini
Alessandra Sciarra
Giuseppe Etiope
Pankaj Sadavarte
Sander Houweling
Sudhanshu Pandey
Alwi Husein
author_sort Adriano Mazzini
title Relevant methane emission to the atmosphere from a geological gas manifestation
title_short Relevant methane emission to the atmosphere from a geological gas manifestation
title_full Relevant methane emission to the atmosphere from a geological gas manifestation
title_fullStr Relevant methane emission to the atmosphere from a geological gas manifestation
title_full_unstemmed Relevant methane emission to the atmosphere from a geological gas manifestation
title_sort relevant methane emission to the atmosphere from a geological gas manifestation
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Quantifying natural geological sources of methane (CH4) allows to improve the assessment of anthropogenic emissions to the atmosphere from fossil fuel industries. The global CH4 flux of geological gas is, however, an object of debate. Recent fossil (14C-free) CH4 measurements in preindustrial-era ice cores suggest very low global geological emissions (~ 1.6 Tg year−1), implying a larger fossil fuel industry source. This is however in contrast with previously published bottom-up and top-down geo-emission estimates (~ 45 Tg year−1) and even regional-scale emissions of ~ 1–2 Tg year−1. Here we report on significant geological CH4 emissions from the Lusi hydrothermal system (Indonesia), measured by ground-based and satellite (TROPOMI) techniques. Both techniques indicate a total CH4 output of ~ 0.1 Tg year−1, equivalent to the minimum value of global geo-emission derived by ice core 14CH4 estimates. Our results are consistent with the order of magnitude of the emission factors of large seeps used in global bottom-up estimates, and endorse a substantial contribution from natural Earth’s CH4 degassing. The preindustrial ice core assessments of geological CH4 release may be underestimated and require further study. Satellite measurements can help to test geological CH4 emission factors and explain the gap between the contrasting estimates.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-83369-9
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