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🗓️ 10 December 2024
⏱️ 37 minutes
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More than 100 countries have pledged to cut methane emissions, with not much to show for it so far. What is being done to change that?
Methane – the main component of natural gas – is the second most significant greenhouse gas, after carbon dioxide. It accounts for about 30% of all the human-induced warming the world has experienced since the 19th century.
At COP26 in 2021, many countries got together to launch the Global Methane Pledge, to drive action on reducing emissions. There are now 111 countries, accounting in total for almost half of global methane emissions, that have signed up to that pledge. Their goal is to reduce global methane emissions by 30% by 2030.
So how much progress has been made in the past few years? Not a lot, is the answer. Instead of starting to decline to meet that targeted 30% reduction, methane emissions have actually been going up.
At COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan, last month, methane was one of the key items on the agenda. Many people there were talking about ideas for bending the curve, to get methane emissions heading in the right direction at last.
While he was at the conference, host Ed Crooks talked to Henrique Bezerra, the regional lead for Latin America for the Global Methane Hub. That's an organization backed by philanthropic money that works on practical projects to cut methane emissions. Henrique discusses the options available to tackle the problem.
Ed also talked to a key figure working to change one of the largest sources of methane emissions: the global oil and gas industry. Bjorn Otto Sverdrup is the chair of the executive committee for the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative, a group backed by 12 big international oil and gas companies that works on reducing emissions.
He's also the head of the secretariat for a larger group that has signed up for the Oil and Gas Decarbonisation Charter. That includes more than 50 big oil and gas groups, including many leading national oil companies from emerging economies, that have pledged to work together to reach net zero emissions from their operations by 2050.
What are companies really doing to cut emissions? What strategies and technologies can help detect and prevent leaks of methane? And how can carbon markets play in role in reducing emissions? Ed and his guests discuss those questions, and assess whether their efforts will start to pay off in time to hit the goals that so many countries have set.
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0:00.0 | Looking to understand the economics, technologies, policies and communities shaping our energy future? |
0:07.0 | Check out a new podcast series, Energize the Future of Energy, from G0 Media's Blue Circle Studio, co-hosted by JJ Ramberg and Greg Ebel, CEO of Enbridge. |
0:16.0 | They explore the energy transition by digging into the biggest challenges of AI, food waste, community impact and policy, with experts like Pulitzer winner Daniel Yeagergin, Microsoft's Ulrich Homan and Impact Technologies Ryan Begin from Divert. |
0:29.3 | Listen on Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts or visit g0media.com slash energy gang to learn more. Hello and welcome to the energy gang to learn more. |
0:45.8 | Hello and welcome to The Energy Gang, |
0:47.4 | a discussion show from Wood Mackenzie about the fast-changing world of energy. |
0:49.5 | I'm Id Crooks, and this is a special episode |
0:52.2 | of bonus coverage from COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan. |
0:56.2 | And what we're focusing on in this episode is the issue of methane. |
1:00.1 | It is the second most important greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide, |
1:03.7 | and it's estimated that it accounts for about 30% of the human-induced global warming |
1:07.8 | that we've seen since pre-industrial times. |
1:10.3 | One of the biggest challenges with methane emissions is what you don't see, you don't care, human-induced global warming that we've seen since pre-industrial times. |
1:10.9 | One of the biggest challenges with methane emissions is what you don't see, you don't care. |
1:15.5 | So you need to see and you need to quantify these emissions and you need technology for that. |
1:20.9 | That was Enhike Pizarra, who is the regional lead for Latin America for the Global Methane Hub. |
1:25.7 | That's an organization backed by philanthropic money that works on practical projects to cut methane emissions. |
1:31.3 | Methane is, of course, the principal component of natural gas, and so emissions come from that natural gas industry, |
1:36.3 | from the coal and the oil industries, and also from agriculture and from waste. |
1:40.3 | And because it's the main component of natural gas, it can seem like one of the easier sources of emissions to cut, because if you capture the gas, then you have a useful product that |
1:48.3 | you can sell. And so, a COP29, which was in many ways a pretty disappointing conference, |
1:53.5 | you can hear my discussion of that with Melissa Lott and Amy Harder on the previous show, |
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