Methane emissions may be much worse than thought

Methane emissions are blamed for 'turbocharging' heatwaves, bushfires and extreme weather events. (Dave Hunt/AAP PHOTOS)

Emissions from gas and coal projects could be much worse than thought as their methane pollution may have been vastly underestimated.

New data suggests Australia's National Inventory of Greenhouse Gas Emissions, based on self-reported information from emitters or sparse local measurements, may not paint the most accurate picture of the nation's pollution.

Preliminary data from new monitoring platform Open Methane - which uses satellite-based measurements and ground-based verification to track emissions - estimates methane levels could be twice as high as what is currently reported.

Chair of climate think tank The Superpower Institute and former consumer watchdog head Rod Sims will on Wednesday officially launch the new Open Methane platform.

"Accurate data is the foundation of effective climate policy: if we can’t measure it, we can’t manage it," he said.

A file photo of Rod Sims
Rod Sims says reducing methane emissions is one of the most immediate ways to slow global warming.

Australia's 20 highest emitting locations were all linked to coal or gas extraction, suggesting these sectors could be producing as much methane as the agriculture industry, if not more.

Methane is believed to account for 30 per cent of the world's temperature rise since the industrial revolution.

It is "turbocharging" heatwaves, bushfires and other extreme weather events in Australia, Australian Conservation Foundation campaigner Piper Rollins said.

"Climate-heating methane emissions from Australia’s coal and gas sector are being massively underestimated," she said.

"While many farmers are taking steps to reduce emissions from their herds, coal and gas projects are derailing Australia’s progress on cutting climate pollution.

"This is likely to be the tip of the iceberg."

Reducing methane is one of the most immediate and impactful ways to slow global warming because of the gas's relatively short atmospheric lifetime and potency, Prof Sims said.

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