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Russia’s Gazprom Behind Largest Industrial Methane Leak Since 2019 – Bloomberg - The Moscow Times
The gas giant has admitted a pipeline leak spewed millions of cubic meters of the potent greenhouse gas into the atmosphere earlier in June.
www.themoscowtimes.com
6/18/21
Gazprom has admitted responsibility for the world’s largest methane pipeline leak in almost two years, Bloomberg reported. Russia’s largest gas company said 2.7 million cubic meters of methane were emitted during emergency repairs to a gas pipeline in Russia’s central Tatarstan republic. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas which scientists say results in a much more immediate and short-term impact on global temperatures than carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. While CO2 emissions can stay in the atmosphere for centuries, the Scientific American science journal has described methane as “warming the planet on steroids for a decade or two” — during which time it can be up to 86 times more harmful than CO2. The emissions leak occurred on June 4 and was first detected by environmental monitoring firm Kayrros, Bloomberg reported. It is the largest detected pipeline leak since September 2019.
In a research note, VTB Capital analyst Dmitry Loukashov said the leak was unlikely to lead to any “substantial financial or operational consequences,” even though the company is set to incur a fine in line with Russia’s environmental regulations. He added, however, that the emissions come at a time of heightened pressure on global energy companies to do more to cut their harmful greenhouse gas emissions and could lead to “negative sentiment” among investors toward the company. Russia’s economy is heavily reliant on oil and gas revenues, but Gazprom is banking on natural gas becoming a favored transition fuel as the developed world accelerates its decarbonization efforts and moves away from more polluting energy sources such as coal and oil.
The Russian public is mostly unaware of the perturbing statistics collected by both scientific experts and government bodies. As few as one-fifth of regions in Russia have their own pollution monitoring systems, and even then, half of their checks on air quality are not carried out to a high enough standard. This means it is virtually impossible to obtain statistically sound data from them. More than 80 per cent of Russia’s air pollution comes from vehicle emissions, especially in European Russia such as Moscow and St. Petersburg. But these cities are not the most polluted in Russia. That accolade goes to those cities which are found in Siberia and the Urals. In these areas, the main source of pollution is from, industry. This is where the country’s mining, chemical and heavy industries are concentrated.
Russia Air Quality Index (AQI) and Air Pollution information | IQAir
Russia Air Quality Index (AQI). Read the air pollution in Russia, get real-time, historical and forecast PM2.5 and weather data with AirVisual.
www.iqair.com