Greenhouse Gas Emissions Detection: Difference between revisions

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=== Carbon dioxide ===
=== Carbon dioxide ===


* '''United States Environmental Protection Agency's Air Markets Program data''': Datasets from the US EPA's emissions trading programs. For instance, the Continuous Emissions Monitoring System dataset (also available via the EPA's [ftp://newftp.epa.gov/DMDnLoad/emissions/ FTP site]) provides hourly CO<sub>2</sub> emissions and generation for many fossil fuel generators in the United States. Available [https://ampd.epa.gov/ampd/ here].
* '''United States Environmental Protection Agency's Air Markets Program data''': Datasets from the US EPA's emissions trading programs. For instance, the Continuous Emissions Monitoring System dataset (also available via the EPA's [ftp://newftp.epa.gov/DMDnLoad/emissions/ FTP site]) provides hourly CO<sub>2</sub> emissions and generation for many fossil fuel power plants in the United States. Available [https://ampd.epa.gov/ampd/ here].


=== Methane ===
=== Methane ===

Revision as of 20:53, 31 August 2020

Machine learning can be used to help measure greenhouse gas emissions using remote sensing data. This can in turn help create better climate change policies, drive climate-related investments, and otherwise inform climate action. Example applications of machine learning include:[1]

  • Detecting methane leaks from natural gas pipelines using satellite and aerial imagery.
  • Measuring power plant CO2 emissions from a combination of satellite imagery and electricity market data.
  • Measuring traditionally hard-to-quantify emissions in the land use sector, e.g., from agriculture and forestry.

Background Readings

Online Courses and Course Materials

Community

  • Climate TRACE: A coalition of organizations seeking to "mobiliz[e] the global tech community—harnessing satellites, artificial intelligence, and collective expertise—to track human-caused emissions to specific sources in real time—independently and publicly." Website here.

Libraries and Tools

Data

General

Carbon dioxide

  • United States Environmental Protection Agency's Air Markets Program data: Datasets from the US EPA's emissions trading programs. For instance, the Continuous Emissions Monitoring System dataset (also available via the EPA's FTP site) provides hourly CO2 emissions and generation for many fossil fuel power plants in the United States. Available here.

Methane

  • Copernicus global methane data: Dataset on global methane emissions from 2002 onwards from the European Space Agency, available here.

Future Directions

References

  1. Bartoszek, L.; et al. (2014-10-01). "Mu2e Technical Design Report". Explicit use of et al. in: |last2= (help); Cite journal requires |journal= (help)