EXPLAINER | How methane emissions threaten climate goals

13 November 2024 - 11:55 By Gloria Dickie
subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now
Methane molecules are more powerful than carbon dioxide in trapping heat, meaning it takes fewer of them to cause the same amount of warming and reducing them can have a more immediate effect than reducing CO2. File photo.
Methane molecules are more powerful than carbon dioxide in trapping heat, meaning it takes fewer of them to cause the same amount of warming and reducing them can have a more immediate effect than reducing CO2. File photo.
Image: 123RF/ munlika

Fast-rising methane emissions could undermine efforts to limit global warming by mid-century, prompting scientists and policymakers to urge aggressive action to curb output of the potent greenhouse gas. Nearly 160 countries have pledged a 30% cut from 2020 methane emissions levels by the end of this decade.

Over the past five years atmospheric methane levels have risen at their fastest rate since record-keeping began in the 1970s, driven in part by natural sources, according to the 2024 Global Methane Budget report.

Here is why controlling methane emissions is so important.

HEAT-TRAPPING POWER

Methane molecules are more powerful than carbon dioxide (CO²) in trapping heat, meaning it takes fewer of them to cause the same amount of warming and reducing them can have a more immediate effect than reducing CO².

Tackling methane also makes financial sense. UN analyses have found cutting methane emissions is likely cheaper than CO² cuts for a comparable climate benefit.

While CO² remains in the atmosphere for centuries, methane breaks down after about a decade, meaning it has less of a long-term impact on temperatures.

Scientists normally compare the overall warming effects of methane versus CO² over a century, calculating methane emissions are about 28 times worse than CO² for global warming.

However, over a shorter timespan of 20 years, methane is 80 times worse.

Scientists estimate methane has led to about 0.5ºC of warming so far, or about one-third of the roughly 1.3ºC of warming experienced to date since pre-industrial times.

SURGING EMISSIONS

Methane concentrations are rising faster than any other major greenhouse gas, with human activities driving at least two-thirds of global emissions, according to the 2024 Global Methane Budget. That includes the agriculture sector, including rice farming and livestock, fossil fuel activities and landfills and other waste.

The report, published every five years, found methane emissions from these human activities have risen overall by 20% over the past two decades. Most of the methane mitigation efforts under way, including EU legislation, are focused on the oil and gas sector, where the emissions are easier to tackle than in agriculture, according to the food-focused investor initiative Fairr.

NATURAL SOURCES A CONCERN

The remaining third of the world's methane emissions comes from natural sources such as thawing permafrost, peat bogs and wetlands, and emissions could rapidly increase as temperatures rise.

Animals, including humans, are also a source of methane.

While it is easy to measure atmospheric methane, understanding where it comes from is crucial for tackling the problem.

By analysing distinct isotope signatures in methane detected, scientists can investigate whether the gas comes from biological sources or industry.

Reuters


subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now

Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.