Study: US spewing 50% more methane than EPA says

Category: News

Pat Dowell
By SETH BORENSTEIN
This undated handout photo provided by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory/ Energy Department shows a Cessna plane, making continuous observations of carbon dioxide, flying over an Atmospheric Radiation Measurement tower used by the Energy Department near the town of Lamont, Oklahoma. Pat Dowell, a research technician at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory is collecting flask samples from the tower. America is spewing 50 percent more methane _ a potent heat-trapping gas _ than the federal government estimates, a new comprehensive scientific study said. And much of it is coming from just three energy-and-cow heavy states: Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas. (AP Photo/Roy Kaltschmidt, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.)

WASHINGTON (AP) —

A new study says the United States is spewing 50 percent more methane than the federal government estimates. Much of it is coming from just three states: Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas.

Scientists say that means methane may be a bigger global warming issue than they thought. Methane is 21 times more potent at trapping heat than carbon dioxide, the most abundant global warming gas, although it doesn’t stay in the air as long.

Much of that extra methane seems to be coming from the belches, flatulence and manure of livestock, and leaks from refining and drilling for oil and gas. The study is published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.

The study figures that in 2008 the U.S. gave off 49 million tons of methane.

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