Emissions Archives - The Energy and Emissions Research Lab /eerl/tag/emissions/ 杏吧原创 University Mon, 09 Sep 2024 15:33:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 Methane Monitoring: 杏吧原创 Research Team Transforms Ways Oil and Gas Sectors Measure and Mitigate Emissions https://research.carleton.ca/story/methane-monitoring-carleton-research-team-transforms-ways-oil-and-gas-sectors-measure-and-mitigate-emissions/#new_tab?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=methane-monitoring-carleton-research-team-transforms-ways-oil-and-gas-sectors-measure-and-mitigate-emissions Wed, 21 Apr 2021 14:28:01 +0000 /eerl/?p=1508 To meet Canada鈥檚 goal of reducing methane emissions by at least 40 per cent by 2025, federal and provincial governments are rolling out regulations to fix methane leaks on oil and gas facility equipment. A big challenge, however, is to know exactly which equipment is leaking the invisible gas.

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EERL’s research on measuring methane emissions featured on CBC news /eerl/2021/eerls-research-on-measuring-methane-emissions-featured-on-cbc-news/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=eerls-research-on-measuring-methane-emissions-featured-on-cbc-news Wed, 14 Apr 2021 13:23:55 +0000 /eerl/?p=1482 The Energy & Emissions Research Lab (EERL) recent has quantitatively and transparently tested a new airborne LiDAR technology developed by Bridger Photonics Inc., which has the potential to transform how oil and gas sector methane sources are detected, quantified, and mitigated. The federal government has made big investments in reducing methane emissions from oil and gas operations, but Professor Matthew Johnson says “you can鈥檛 reduce what you can鈥檛 measure and if we’re serious about near term reduction targets of 45% and net-zero by 2050, we need to be measuring progress or we won’t make it”.

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New EERL Publication Details Blinded Study of Novel Airborne Methane Source Detection Technology /eerl/2021/new-eerl-publication-details-blinded-study-of-novel-airborne-methane-source-detection-technology/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=new-eerl-publication-details-blinded-study-of-novel-airborne-methane-source-detection-technology Thu, 01 Apr 2021 11:23:57 +0000 /eerl/?p=1456

In a new appearing in the prestigious journal Remote Sensing of Environment, the Energy & Emissions Research Lab (EERL) has quantitatively and transparently tested a new airborne LiDAR technology developed by Bridger Photonics Inc., which has the potential to transform how oil and gas sector methane sources are detected, quantified, and mitigated.听 Airborne measurements using Bridger鈥檚 Gas Mapping LiDAR™ (GML) technology were performed at active oil and gas facilities in Northern British Columbia, Canada, while a ground team moved beneath the plane deploying and redeploying wind sensors at a subset of sites as part of evaluating measurement uncertainties due to uncertain wind data.听 However, unbeknownst to Bridger, the EERL ground crew was also able to perform controlled methane releases at several sites, providing a true, blinded assessment of the sensitivity of the Bridger technology and its ability to find sources without knowing where to look or even that an evaluation was underway.听 Overall the EERL team was able to catch up with the plane at 48 unique sites completing 65 wind measurements (some sites were visited again by the aircraft on subsequent days) as well as 29 controlled methane releases at 22 distinct sites during the 5-day aerial survey.

These data give unique insight into the current real-world performance of the Bridger technology and provide invaluable data for understanding the potential utility of this or similar airborne measurement technology in meeting regulatory requirements and in interpreting field measurement data to develop better inventories and drive mitigation of emissions.

Results were used to derive a detection sensitivity limit as a function of wind speed and demonstrate that Bridger鈥檚 GML technology it is capable of detecting, locating, and quantifying individual sources at or below the magnitudes of recent regulated venting limits. 听Most importantly, this publication lays the groundwork for upcoming analyses by EERL using airborne survey data to help re-derive methane inventories for oil and gas activity in British Columbia and beyond.

Publication

M.R. Johnson, D.R. Tyner, A.J. Szekeres (2021), Blinded evaluation of airborne methane source detection using Bridger Photonics LiDAR, Remote Sensing of Environment, Volume 259, 112418. (doi: )

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Post Doctoral Fellowships Positions /eerl/2019/eerl-is-expanding-its-research-team-with-two-new-pdfs-and-a-research-lab-engineer-position/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=eerl-is-expanding-its-research-team-with-two-new-pdfs-and-a-research-lab-engineer-position Thu, 08 Aug 2019 15:05:12 +0000 /eerl/?p=1323

The NSERC FlareNet Network is accepting applications for a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow to contribute to large-scale wind tunnel experiments to quantify carbon conversion efficiencies and pollutant emissions from gas flares found that are common in the global oil and gas industry.听 This research is a central part of the NSERC FlareNet strategic network (), led out of 杏吧原创 University in collaboration with the University of Western Ontario, University of Alberta, University of British Columbia, and University of Waterloo.听 This position will be based at Western University in London, ON but the successful applicant will also work very closely with the team at the Energy & Emissions Research Lab at 杏吧原创 University

Research Focus: The postdoctoral researcher will play an essential role in meeting the objectives of on effects of turbulent crosswinds on flare emissions.听 Under this theme, FlareNet is conducting the world鈥檚 first systematic experiments to specifically quantify the impacts of wind turbulence scale and intensity on emissions from flares, including those associated with unconventional oil and gas recovery, as well as air- and steam-assisted flares. 听Through the development of quantitative understanding and predictive models for gas and particulate phase emissions that include the effects of a turbulent crosswind, this work will be a central contribution of the NSERC network.

  • The position is open January. 6st, 2019 with funding secured for 18 months appointment June 30th 2021:听 Click for further details听

EERL is looking to hire two new Post Doctoral Research Fellows

杏吧原创 EERL

Our lab conducts interdisciplinary research within the general areas of fluid mechanics, combustion, thermodynamics, and laser diagnostics with applications focused on pollution quantification and mitigation in the upstream energy industry. We collaborate closely with National Research Council and Natural Resources Canada and draw research support from several diverse sources including the World Bank Global Gas Flaring Reduction Partnership (GGFR), Natural Resources Canada, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC), Environment Canada, Petroleum Technology Alliance of Canada (PTAC), and United Nations Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC).

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FlareNet Team Works to Minimize Gas Flaring in Ecuador /eerl/2019/flarenet-team-works-to-minimize-gas-flaring-in-ecuador/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=flarenet-team-works-to-minimize-gas-flaring-in-ecuador Thu, 01 Aug 2019 19:41:53 +0000 /eerl/?p=1311 Engineering Solutions to Minimize or Eliminate Gas Flaring

Armed with equipment and assisted by Ecuador鈥檚 state oil company, Johnson and his team went off in search of the lighters鈥攆lares at the end of gas pipelines鈥攖o find out what exactly was being burned.

Johnson, who is known for his experimental research methods for measuring emissions from oil and gas production, is the Canada Research Professor in Energy and Combustion Generated Pollutant Emissions. He is also director of the听FlareNet Network鈥攁 group of researchers and academics from 杏吧原创, four other Canadian universities, the听National Research Council (NRC), and听Natural Resources Canada (NRCan)听who study pollutants from fossil fuel production.

Funded by the听Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)听in 2016, FlareNet is a five-year, $6.9 million research project involving large-scale flaring experiments and field measurements. FlareNet鈥檚 goal is to provide measurement tools, field data and scientific backing to support better policy, regulations and engineering solutions to minimize or eliminate gas flaring and reduce the impact on climate change.

Full Story Link听https://newsroom.carleton.ca/story/flaring-in-the-amazon/

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EERL Publication Highlights Enhanced Climate Implications of Flare Black Carbon /eerl/2019/enhanced-bc-absorption-for-flares/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=enhanced-bc-absorption-for-flares Sat, 15 Jun 2019 16:13:28 +0000 /eerl/?p=1195 The radiative forcing effect of black carbon (BC, suggested to be second only to carbon dioxide) is highly sensitive to its source location and therefore atmospheric lifetime. For example, BC emitted in the Amazon rainforest is likely to be quickly rained out of the atmosphere while wintertime BC emitted in the Siberian Arctic is thought to move poleward and deposit on the snow and ice pack, reducing the ground albedo and enhancing its rate of melt. One relevant source of BC in both of these examples is gas flaring in the oil and gas industry, the practice of combustion-based disposal of unwanted gases that are deemed uneconomical to preserve for market. Global flaring activities are large in scale with significant potential to negatively impact earth’s climate, and BC emissions from gas flares are poorly characterized relative to other important sources like diesel engines.

The simplest link between the climatic effect of BC and its atmospheric concentration is the mass-normalized absorption cross-section (MAC) of the BC particles. Consequently, BC MAC has been, and remains, a highly active topic of research.听 Perhaps the most well-known and well-cited data is from Bond & Bergstrom (2006) who performed an exhaustive literature review of BC MAC in the literature. They noted that variability in BC MAC tends to be overshadowed by measurement uncertainty, leading them to suggest a single value of BC MAC, despite the multitude of BC sources that exist. Their value of 7.5 m2/g at 550 nm has been cited hundreds of times. In 2016 however, researchers from Prof. Bond’s laboratory measured flare-specific BC MAC values that averaged approximately a factor of two higher than 7.5 m2/g, although uncertainties were large. These measurements raised the question of whether Bond & Bergstrom’s BC MAC should be expected to be representative of gas flaring; especially since gas flares are significantly different from other BC sources in terms of fuel and scale.

Schematic of the 杏吧原创 Vertical Flare Facility, where flares of up to three meters in length burning fuels representative of the oil and gas industry are studied.

Recently, at the 杏吧原创 Vertical Flare Facility, Ph.D. candidate Bradley Conrad and Prof. Matthew Johnson – with the help of Natural Resources Canada’s Melina Jefferson and Brian Crosland – performed the first controlled experiments of BC MAC from flames representative of gas flares in terms of fuel and aerodynamics. Flares of up to three meters in length were created burning fuels representative of the flared gases in the global oil and gas industry. Parallel measurements of BC light absorption and mass concentration enabled the direct calculation of flare BC MAC with robustly characterized uncertainties.

EERL-measured values of flare BC MAC were found to vary with fuel composition and flow rate and, over the experimental range, were as much as 30% greater than Bond and Bergstrom’s BC MAC value. Importantly, observed variability was found to be predictable via a novel “MAC scaling parameter” that captures flame radiative effects and, thus, the time-temperature history of BC while it is within the flame. The MAC scaling parameter was used to develop a phenomenological model of BC MAC as a function of readily available flare data, which could be of use to the climate modelling community.

Phenomenological model of flare BC MAC as a function of wavelength and MAC scaling parameter. Blue, green, and red data points (with 95% confidence intervals) correspond to measurements at 405, 532, and 870 nm.

The derived BC MAC model also appeared to bridge the gap between the disparate data of Bond & Bergstrom (2006) and their more recent flare-specific data. Encouragingly, the BC MAC model asymptotically approaches a value of 7.25 m2/g at 550 nm at low values of the scaling parameter that represent small-scale flames burning heavy fuels (consistent with Bond & Bergstrom’s source data). At the extreme of large scaling parameters however (large-scale flames burning lighter fuels – i.e., flares), allowing for some extrapolation, the BC MAC model reconciles Bond’s laboratory’s relatively high field measurements of BC MAC, suggesting that their results were simply a consequence of BC MAC from larger-scale flames. If the BC MAC model is indeed representative of gas flaring in the global oil and gas industry, it is possible that flare BC MAC is more than 30-100% larger than the value of Bond and Bergstrom (2006).

These observations have recently been published in and shared with stakeholders from the (who presented these results at in Katowice) and the .

Publication

B.M. Conrad, M.R. Johnson (2019) Mass absorption cross-section of flare-generated black carbon: variability, predictive model, and implications, Carbon, 149: 760-771 (doi: )

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New EERL Publication Details a Technique that Could Enable Real-Time Quantification of Fugitive Leaks /eerl/2019/new-eerl-publication-details-a-technique-that-could-enable-real-time-quantification-of-fugitive-leaks/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=new-eerl-publication-details-a-technique-that-could-enable-real-time-quantification-of-fugitive-leaks Fri, 14 Jun 2019 20:14:09 +0000 /eerl/?p=1168 As a follow-up to previous work, Ph.D Graduate Carol A. Brereton and Prof. Matthew Johnson, along with co-author Lucy J. Campbell from the Mathematics and Statistics Department at 杏吧原创 University, have published a new research paper in that investigates a technique that could enable near real-time detection and quantification of fugitive emission sources on an ongoing basis.

Fugitive releases, such as leaking valves or fittings, are important sources of greenhouse gases that can usually be eliminated economically through repair and maintenance.听 However, this is only possible once they are noticed and located, which can be difficult in facilities that may have several miles of pipe and hundreds or thousands of fittings. 听The need for skilled labour and expensive equipment mean leak detection and repair (LDAR) programs can be expensive to implement on a regular basis.听 Fugitive sources can persist for months or longer without being detected.

Source locations predicted with varying levels of wind simplification and error using quickly computed PRT method. Major source locations L1 and L2 found in each case

Continuous and automatic detection and quantification of leaks using a sparse network of methane sensors, potentially requiring no personnel onsite, could vastly reduce this timeframe. The amount of data processing required, however, has been one of the difficulties with such an approach.听 This paper demonstrates how reusable pre-computations on approximate wind fields can be used to reduce processing time by a factor of several hundred, making detection and quantification of unknown leak(s) within a complex facility feasible on a desktop computer.听 For facilities with a fixed sensor network, this raises the possibility of near-continuous identification and quantification of leaks as they arise.

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FlareNet Research Team Conducting First Systematic Experiments to Evaluate Impact of Turbulent (Gusting) Winds on Flare Efficiency /eerl/2018/flarenet-research-team-conducting-first-systematic-experiments-to-evaluate-impact-of-turbulent-gusting-winds-on-flare-efficiency/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=flarenet-research-team-conducting-first-systematic-experiments-to-evaluate-impact-of-turbulent-gusting-winds-on-flare-efficiency Thu, 20 Dec 2018 16:01:20 +0000 /eerl/?p=1101 FlareNet is currently running its initial flare experiments at the Boundary Layer Wind Tunnel at Western University in London, Ontario. The main focus of this research under Theme 3 of FlareNet, is to complete the world鈥檚 first systematic experiments quantifying the impacts of wind turbulence scale and intensity on emissions from flares. The objective听of these initial experiments is to evaluate the impact of turbulent (gusting) winds on flare efficiency.

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杏吧原创 Researchers Determine Mitigating Alberta Methane is Surprisingly Cost-Effective, Far Cheaper than Carbon Price Targets /eerl/2018/carleton-researchers-determine-mitigating-alberta-methane-is-surprisingly-cost-effective-far-cheaper-than-carbon-price-targets/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=carleton-researchers-determine-mitigating-alberta-methane-is-surprisingly-cost-effective-far-cheaper-than-carbon-price-targets Tue, 23 Oct 2018 16:38:21 +0000 /eerl/?p=1031 A study published today by 杏吧原创 University鈥檚 David Tyner and Matthew Johnson in the prestigious journal Environmental Science and Technology reveals broad opportunities to mitigate methane emissions in Alberta鈥檚 oil and gas industry in a cost-effective way.

9422 oil sites in Alberta

Through detailed analysis of mitigation potential at nearly 10,000 individual sites, the study determined a 45-per-cent reduction in reported vented methane at upstream oil and heavy oil production sites 鈥 in line with federal and provincial targets — is economically efficient and feasible.

鈥淭here are up front capital costs to industry in the range of $150 million to $500 million depending on the scenario considered, but these are largely offset by revenue from capture of saleable gas into pipelines or reduced reliance on supplementary propane use at production sites,鈥 said Tyner, a research associate at the Energy and Emissions Research Lab (EERL) within the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. 听鈥淭he net average cost to industry is less than $2.50 per tonne CO2e and some sites could be profitable depending on the scenario considered.鈥

鈥淐ompared to federal and provincial carbon price targets of $30 to $50 per tonne, these actions are incredibly cheap,鈥 added Johnson, a Canada Research Professor in 杏吧原创鈥檚 Faculty of Engineering and Design and head of EERL.听 “They represent some of the most cost-effective actions available and show why governments are right to focus on near-term methane reductions as a key opportunity in battling climate change.鈥

鈥淕iven the potential returns, the initial capital costs would be better classed as an investment in the Canadian energy sector. Beyond the obvious environmental benefits, the economic spinoffs for engineering service providers and technology companies would be significant.听 This is an important opportunity for improving competitiveness and reducing the carbon footprint of Canadian energy development.鈥

The paper evaluated six types of mitigation methods, including recovery of gas into pipelines to sell, using gas for on-site process heating requirements, or disposal via combustion.

Reported venting volumes in Alberta in 2015

The paper notes there are other important sources of methane emissions in the oil and gas sector beyond those specifically considered in the analysis.听 However, the reduction opportunities at the selected sites exceed the nominal 45-per-cent reduction target and could partially offset the challenges of addressing methane emissions from fugitive and unreported venting sources.

The 杏吧原创 researchers also considered the implications of their widely cited, recently published airborne methane measurement study that suggested reported venting at heavy oil sites in Alberta is underestimated by as much as 4.9 times.

鈥淭here is a further silver lining in this research 鈥 the larger volumes of released methane suggested by field measurements actually improve the economics of mitigating the gas,鈥 said Johnson. 听鈥淭he analysis suggests that with more methane available, sector-wide methane reductions of 34 per cent are economically achievable, even before considering other methane sources such as fugitive leaks and pneumatic venting,鈥 added Tyner.

鈥淭hese findings serve as a prime example of the leading research being performed every day at 杏吧原创,鈥 said Fred Afagh, interim dean of the Faculty of Engineering and Design. 鈥淥ur researchers are continually developing real-world solutions that benefit our environment and society as a whole.鈥

A stark new report from the global scientific authority on climate change this month said governments must make “rapid, far-reaching and unprecedented changes in all aspects of society” to avoid disastrous levels of global warming.

The report issued by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), said the planet will reach the crucial threshold of 1.5 C above pre-industrial levels by as early as 2030 based on current levels of greenhouse gas emissions, precipitating the risk of extreme drought, wildfires, floods and food shortages for hundreds of millions of people.

The planet is already two-thirds of the way there, with global temperatures having warmed about 1 C.

Canada would have to cut its emissions almost in half over the next 12 years to meet the stiffer targets dozens of international climate change experts say are required to prevent catastrophic results from global warming.

A copy of the 杏吧原创 paper is available here听

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Reducing Methane Emissions, 杏吧原创 Symposium Tackles the Problem /our-stories/story/mastering-methane/?utm_source=Homepage&utm_campaign=November2017&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=mastering-methane-carleton-symposium-tackles-the-problem Fri, 24 Nov 2017 00:28:36 +0000 /eerl/?p=812

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