Study unveils oil and gas drilling pollutes air significantly
Oil and gas drilling across much of the Southwest produces far more emissions linked to global warming than
previously realized, according to a new study by UC Irvine scientists. One of the pollutants measured in abundance is
methane, a gas that contributes to ozone near Earth's surface as well as to warming of the planet. The researchers
found about twice as much methane as expected, suggesting the United States and other nations have grossly
underestimated global releases of the greenhouse gas.
"Based on these findings, it appears that the US is emitting 4 to 6 mm tons more methane per year than previously
estimated," said F. Sherwood Rowland, a leading authority on global air pollution at UC Irvine. "In fact, our study
suggests that total hydrocarbon emissions are higher than stated in current estimates. This means the American air
pollution problem has still another new, significant aspect."
The study, which appears in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, shows that
energy exploration contributes slightly more to smog in cities from New Mexico to Texas to Kansas than previously
realized.
Rowland, UC Irvine chemist Donald Blake and three colleagues examined air quality across a 1,000-mile area including
parts of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Arkansas, New Mexico and Louisiana. They were following up on a 1999 air pollution
study in which researchers discovered levels of various hydrocarbons in and around Oklahoma City that surpassed those
in smoggy cities such as Los Angeles, Houston, New York and Chicago. Hydrocarbons are reactive gases that mix with
combustion gases and sunshine to make ozone, the main ingredient in smog.
Using about 350 measurements in 2001 and 2002, scientists discovered high concentrations of hydrocarbons, including
methane, ethane, propane and butane, over hundreds of miles in and around Oklahoma City. The Oklahoma capital
contained more than double the amount of hydrocarbons than air in more densely populated urban areas of the United
States, the study shows. The researchers also found unexpectedly high levels of alkyl nitrates, a by-product of ozone
formation.
While many of those pollutants can contribute to smog, they are less reactive than other chemicals typically emitted
by paints and solvents or automobile tailpipes. The result is that the pollutants can boost ozone concentrations over
the region, albeit very slightly, Blake said.
"This study shows air pollution is not just a big-city problem, and it needs to be fixed," said John Walke, director
of the clean air program for the Natural Resources Defence Council. "The oil and gas industry are bringing more
pollution, (lung) disease and global warming to the heartland."
While oil and gas wells have long been known to emit air pollutants, researchers said they were particularly
surprised at the high quantities of methane detected. Methane is 21 times more efficient than carbon dioxide, the
most common greenhouse gas, at trapping heat near Earth. Previously, it had been estimated that energy production in
the United States released about 6 mm tons of methane annually.
But the new study shows actual methane emissions from those sources may be nearly double that amount. Possible
sources for the extra emissions could be leaky tanks, valves or pipes or natural seepage. The research was funded by
the National Institute for Global Environmental Change, a division of the US Energy Department.
