October 19TH 2020
The best of our climate-change analysis, delivered every fortnight
Carbon dioxide gets all the attention when it comes to greenhouse-gas emissions, and with good reason: it accounts for roughly three-quarters of all global emissions. Methane, accounting for roughly one-sixth, comes in second place. But the volumes belie its importance. Carbon dioxide can stay in the atmosphere for centuries before it is reabsorbed by vegetation and the oceans, whereas methane remains for years or decades. During that time, methane has a much greater warming influence on the climate—83 to 87 times greater than carbon dioxide over 20 years.
Between a quarter and a third of methane emissions escape from the fossil-fuel industry, including from leaky installations and pipes. Patching these up has long been seen as “low-hanging fruit” in efforts to stem emissions. So the European Union’s plans, published last week, to require oil and gas companies to report and fix methane leaks is a step in the right direction. Just how big (or small) a step that is will not be clear until next year, when legislative proposals are due.
Catherine Brahic
Environment Editor
How some international treaties threaten the environment
Investor-state dispute-settlement provisions are blamed for impeding government action
Demand for electricity has revived, despite uncertainty about the path of the virus
Arid areas have more trees than previously thought
A census of all Earth’s trees may eventually be possible
Boris Johnson’s optimistic green-energy plan
Making 40GW of electricity from offshore wind is a stretch
Nigeria’s President Buhari is doing away with petrol subsidies
The French mayor who cancelled the Christmas tree
France’s Green politicians are grabbing attention, not all of it positive
Canadian oilmen drill the government for aid
Justin Trudeau has coupled green ambition with a desire to avert the oil industry's collapse
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