By Agence France-Presse
Methane emissions from coal mining in China have continued to rise despite tough legislation and ambitious government targets, a new study based on satellite data said Wednesday.
The research found that the largest increases in methane emissions were from regions with lots of coal production (AFP Photo/MANILA BULLETIN)
The news is likely to fuel concerns that major emitters like China are failing to meet targets intended to prevent nightmare climate change scenarios.
"China's methane regulations have not had a detectable impact on the country's methane emissions," the study's first author Scot Miller told AFP.
"China has been able to 'talk the talk' so to speak in terms of setting emissions reduction policies, but we found that the country has not yet been able to 'walk the walk'," added Miller, assistant professor of environmental health and engineering at Johns Hopkins University.
The research used data gathered by a Japanese satellite that monitors greenhouse gases and looked at measurements from 2010-2015, the most recent information available when the study began two years ago.
It found that emissions continued to grow in line with pre-2010 trends even after a raft of new regulations came into place.
"We estimate that emissions in 2015 are 50 percent higher than in 2000," Miller said.
The increase in China's emissions over the 15-year period was comparable "to the total annual emissions from a country like Russia or Brazil," he added.
Methane is considered the second most important greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide.
Like CO2, it traps the sun's heat, warming the atmosphere, but methane does so 28 times more efficiently than carbon dioxide.
While methane can be naturally released, and absorbed, by the earth, emissions of the gas have skyrocketed along with industrialization and a growing human population.
It occurs naturally in seams of coal and is released when the resource is mined.
The research found that the largest increases in methane emissions were from regions with lots of coal production (AFP Photo/MANILA BULLETIN)
The news is likely to fuel concerns that major emitters like China are failing to meet targets intended to prevent nightmare climate change scenarios.
"China's methane regulations have not had a detectable impact on the country's methane emissions," the study's first author Scot Miller told AFP.
"China has been able to 'talk the talk' so to speak in terms of setting emissions reduction policies, but we found that the country has not yet been able to 'walk the walk'," added Miller, assistant professor of environmental health and engineering at Johns Hopkins University.
The research used data gathered by a Japanese satellite that monitors greenhouse gases and looked at measurements from 2010-2015, the most recent information available when the study began two years ago.
It found that emissions continued to grow in line with pre-2010 trends even after a raft of new regulations came into place.
"We estimate that emissions in 2015 are 50 percent higher than in 2000," Miller said.
The increase in China's emissions over the 15-year period was comparable "to the total annual emissions from a country like Russia or Brazil," he added.
Methane is considered the second most important greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide.
Like CO2, it traps the sun's heat, warming the atmosphere, but methane does so 28 times more efficiently than carbon dioxide.
While methane can be naturally released, and absorbed, by the earth, emissions of the gas have skyrocketed along with industrialization and a growing human population.
It occurs naturally in seams of coal and is released when the resource is mined.