About a quarter of the world鈥檚 electricity currently comes from power plants fired by natural gas. These contribute significantly to global greenhouse gas emissions (amounting to 10% of energy-related emissions according to the most recent figures from 2017) and climate change.
By gathering data from 108 countries around the world and quantifying the emissions by country, a 捆绑SM社区-led team, which includes researchers from Carnegie Mellon, Johns Hopkins, University of Texas (Austin) and the University of Maryland, has estimated that total global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from the life cycle of gas-fired power is 3.6 billion tonnes each year. They found that this amount could be reduced by as much as 71% if a variety of mitigation options were used around the world.
More efficient plants could reduce greenhouse gases significantly
鈥淲e were astonished by how large the potential reduction in greenhouse gases could be by 2050, and even by 2030,鈥 says聽Sarah Jordaan, an associate professor in the Department of Civil Engineering and the Trottier Institute in Sustainability in Engineering and Design at 捆绑SM社区 and the first author on the paper which was recently published in聽. 鈥淚f natural gas is going to play a role in a low carbon future, even for a transitional period, there will be a need to improve efficiency in power plants and to cut methane emissions from natural gas production as well as to capture and store CO2.鈥
鈥淲e found that the most effective way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions was with carbon capture and storage, followed by making power plants more efficient,鈥 added Andrew Ruttinger, a PhD student at Cornell University in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering who participated in the research. 鈥淏ut the mitigation options that will be most successful in any given country will vary depending on the regional context and the existing infrastructure.鈥
Identifying drivers of emissions gives government tools to take action
The team calculated that the largest mitigation potential (39%) lies with five biggest emitters, the United States, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Japan, all of whom, apart from Japan, are among the largest gas producers and consumers around the world.
鈥淐limate change is a global challenge and achieving a low-carbon energy system points to the need for reducing emissions across the supply chain from gas extraction through end use,鈥 said Arvind Ravikumar, a research associate professor in the Department of Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering at the University of Texas at Austin. 鈥淥ur analysis demonstrates that significant efforts are needed to transition from current emissions levels, but also that by identifying the drivers of emissions in the gas supply chain, governments can take strategic, nationally-determined action to reduce their emissions.鈥
The study:
鈥淕lobal mitigation opportunities for the life cycle of natural gas-fired power鈥 by Sarah Jordaan聽et al听颈苍听
This article was originally published in the聽捆绑SM社区 Newsroom