Research into methane removal continues to gain momentum as more experts recognize methane’s importance in the climate system and the risk of increased methane emissions from natural systems as the planet warms. “Methane removal” refers to methods of breaking down atmospheric methane faster than natural systems would alone to help lower peak temperatures and to counteract some of the potential impact of rising natural methane emissions. Last week, the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University released a new report, Removing Methane via Atmospheric Oxidation Enhancement: The Legal Landscape, that provides a first-of-its-kind exploration of the international and domestic (US) legal frameworks governing the field, with funding support from both ClimateWorks and Spark. The Sabin Center is continuing work in this field with analyses of other categories of methane removal approaches.
Atmospheric oxidation enhancement (AOE) is one of several proposed categories of approaches to remove methane after it’s been emitted and mixed into the atmosphere. Proposed AOE approaches would increase the overall atmospheric methane sink using atmospheric oxidants, such as chlorine and hydroxyl radicals, to mimic the natural breakdown of methane. The atmospheric concentration of methane is determined by the balance of sources and sinks, thus amplification of natural sinks — such as atmospheric oxidation which accounts for approximately 95% of methane loss — holds potential for reducing rising methane levels.
The Sabin Center report describes important aspects of the current legal frameworks that may be relevant for AOE:
Spark is grateful to the report’s authors, Romany Webb, Korey Silverman-Roati, and Martin Lockman, for taking on this groundbreaking work and clarifying the existing legal framework for AOE. With its partners, Spark will continue supporting work to understand which — if any — methane removal approaches may be viable and how they could help to mitigate sources of unmanaged climate risk.
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