9 - Other GHG Emissions

The other GHGs described here are methane and nitrous oxide. In fact, there are a few others such as HFCs (refrigerants). Methane is released as soon as there is anaerobic decomposition (i.e. in the absence of oxygen): in a cow’s belly, also known as the rumen, which gives its name to ruminants (in the rumen, bacteria digest the cellulose that the cow cannot metabolise, then the cow regurgitates this grass to chew it again and swallow it for good); in rice fields because they are covered with water, and the organic matter underwater does not receive oxygen when it decomposes; in waste dumps, when the piles are too deep for oxygen to reach the bottom of the pile. Methane is also the main component of natural gas. Leaks on gas pipelines therefore also release methane into the atmosphere. Emissions of nitrous oxide (N2O) are mainly due to the use of agricultural nitrogen fertilizers, the production of animal feed and certain chemical processes, such as the production of nitric acid. There are also fluorinated gases which are used as refrigerants (air conditioning and cold chains), fire extinguishers and in certain industrial processes and consumer goods (such as certain solvents). They are not naturally present in the atmosphere.

Earth from Space
Methane is the second most abundant anthropogenic greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide yet is more than 25 times as potent as carbon dioxide at trapping heat in the atmosphere. It is important to track and manage fugitive methane emissions, gases that escape or leak unintentionally or through a controlled release from industrial processes, as significant gains can be achieved in limiting global temperature increase by curbing such emissions. The coal mining industry contributes significantly to global methane emissions and is responsible for around 33% of all fossil fuel related emissions of methane from 2008-2017. The Tropomi instrument onboard the Copernicus Sentinel-5P satellite is the only instrument that maps global methane concentrations every single day. This lets scientists detect hotspots for large methane sources around the world – allowing us to address the consequences of methane emissions on our climate and environment.
Credits :© ESA

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Causes

Other GHG Emissions


Agriculture

Other GHG Emissions

The pictures in the background of card 9 should put you on the track!


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Consequence

Other GHG Emissions

the "G" and the "H" on card 9 relate to "GreenHouse" on card 13.


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Other possible cause

Other GHG Emissions

In fact, methane emissions from industry are as strong as emissions from agriculture because of fugitive emissions (natural gas leaks from pipelines). This is a point that is little known, so this relationship is not considered strongly relevant. Industry also emits HFCs (refrigerants).