The «all of the above» praise of oil production growth isn't so wonderful on climate change terms and we are discovering
things about methane leakage in natural gas, but this is the «truth» of «All of the Above».
Not exact matches
This year we head to Nashville to talk
about dinosaurs ancient and otherwise, exoplanets, carbon cycling, pictures from Pluto, metallic hydrogen, photon pressure, and
methane on Mars, among other
things.
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Things To Know
About the EPA's
Methane Limits
On the Semiletov
thing, I seem to have gotten that impression from this piece from CP a ways back: «Since 1994, Igor Semiletov of the Far - Eastern branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences «has led
about 10 expeditions in the Laptev Sea but during the 1990s he did not detect any elevated levels of
methane.»
«Until we do something
about CO2, nothing we do
about methane or these other
things is going to matter much for climate»
One
thing we didn't talk
about was the
methane bubbles in the ocean, and
methane in the permafrost.
One possible explanation; Berndt thinks that two
things may be going on at once: a slow leak of
methane that's been going on for hundreds of years, and also the beginning of the hydrate breakup that scientists have been worried
about.
That noted, here are four
things you need to know
about this project and the extensive media coverage it's received, as well as EDF's past
methane research and
methane emissions in general.
They are not backing away from anything because they never said
things about high sea - levels or polar
methane releases being a significant factor before 2100, even the Gulf Stream shutdown.
Berndt thinks that two
things may be going on at once: a slow leak of
methane that's been going on for hundreds of years, and also the beginning of the hydrate breakup that scientists have been worried
about...»
The importance of this debate has grown the more we've learned
about methane — and one of the
things we've learned is how fast it acts.