A study by NASA and the University of Michigan published on Thursday in the journal Geophysical Research Letters says that levels of methane in the Four Corners area where New Mexico, Colorado, Utah and Arizona connect are 80 percent higher than Environmental Protection Agency estimates, Seth Borenstein reports for the San Francisco Chronicle. (NASA photo: Four Corners is a major hot spot for methane emissions)
The high level of methane "is likely leakage from pumping methane out of coal mines," Borenstein writes. Data taken from 2003 to 2009 "found atmospheric methane
concentrations equivalent to emissions of about 1.3 million pounds a
year."
"The amount of methane in the Four Corners—an area covering about 2,500
square miles—would trap more heat in the atmosphere than all the
carbon dioxide produced yearly in Sweden," Borenstein writes. "That's because methane is 86
times more potent for trapping heat in the short-term than carbon
dioxide." (Read more)
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