Displaying 1 - 17 of 17
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Article
IEA warns that methane emissions from the global energy sector fell only fractionally last year, despite projects to cut methane leaks providing hugely attractive returns on investment.
by James Murray
2
Article
Understanding where our greenhouse gas emissions come from is crucial to helping us curb them.
3
Article
Scientists say governments aren't factoring in the big short-term impact of rising methane emissions in meeting mid-century climate targets.
by Fred Pearce
4
Article
The fight to reduce the powerful super pollutant is already underway, with the focus on agriculture, landfill management and industrial emissions.
5
Article
It's past time to stop this 200-year-old practice.
6
Article
As the federal government continues its rollback of methane safeguards, public attention is trained on policymakers and companies in Texas and New Mexico.
7
Webcast
Reducing agricultural methane emissions is critical to meeting global climate targets. This is especially true for many food and agriculture companies who sell meat and dairy, as over one-third of U.S.
8
Article
Methane is 84 times worse as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide. What if we could chemically change methane into carbon dioxide?
by Pep Canadell
9
Article
Why ultra-low-carbon biomethane, aka renewable natural gas, deserves more attention from policymakers.
10
Article
We need to limit consumption of foods with outsized climate impacts, especially beef, lamb and goat.
11
Article
Acting quickly to reduce relatively short-lived yet potent gases could have a big impact on human health and slow global warming.
12
Article
A leak rate of more than 3 percent would erase the climate benefits of replacing coal-fired power plants.
13
Article
Imports of foreign oil are at their lowest levels since 1967. But there's a dirty secret underneath those numbers.
by Joel Makower
14
Article
Methane is the most dangerous greenhouse gas emission, and accurate measuring is necessary to ensure that corporations meet their public commitments and meet the 2-degree warning.
by Richard Ward
15
Article
Hint: it has to do with methane, a greenhouse gas 84 times as potent as carbon dioxide.
16
Article
Leaks are bad, but we have a larger methane problem. An emerging biogas industry that uses organic waste gas capture is a possible solution.
17
Article
The year starts with growing momentum to cut oil and gas methane pollution.