1 research outputs found
Variation in Methane Emission Rates from Well Pads in Four Oil and Gas Basins with Contrasting Production Volumes and Compositions
Atmospheric
methane emissions from active natural gas production
sites in normal operation were quantified using an inverse Gaussian
method (EPA’s OTM 33a) in four major U.S. basins/plays: Upper
Green River (UGR, Wyoming), Denver-Julesburg (DJ, Colorado), Uintah
(Utah), and Fayetteville (FV, Arkansas). In DJ, Uintah, and FV, 72–83%
of total measured emissions were from 20% of the well pads, while
in UGR the highest 20% of emitting well pads only contributed 54%
of total emissions. The total mass of methane emitted as a percent
of gross methane produced, termed throughput-normalized methane average
(TNMA) and determined by bootstrapping measurements from each basin,
varied widely between basins and was (95% CI): 0.09% (0.05–0.15%)
in FV, 0.18% (0.12–0.29%) in UGR, 2.1% (1.1–3.9%) in
DJ, and 2.8% (1.0–8.6%) in Uintah. Overall, wet-gas basins
(UGR, DJ, Uintah) had higher TNMA emissions than the dry-gas FV at
all ranges of production per well pad. Among wet basins, TNMA emissions
had a strong negative correlation with average gas production per
well pad, suggesting that consolidation of operations onto single
pads may reduce normalized emissions (average number of wells per
pad is 5.3 in UGR versus 1.3 in Uintah and 2.8 in DJ)