Smallest Methane
Emission Ever Detected by Satellite
Oct. 8, 2020
GHGSat announced the first
results from its latest satellite GHGSat-C1
("Iris"), which already indicates performance 5
times better than its predecessor.
Launched into low-Earth
orbit just last month, "Iris" was tasked with
measuring a controlled release of methane from a
facility in Alberta, Canada. Ground measurements
of the controlled release confirmed an emission
rate of 260 kgCH4/hr, comparable to the
emissions from a large landfill. The satellite
successfully detected the controlled release,
less than two weeks after launch.
An aircraft fitted with the
same, patented GHGSat high-resolution sensor was
flown at the same time over the site providing
further data to validate the satellite
measurement.
Stephane Germain, GHGSat
CEO, said: "We are delighted by these first
results and by how quickly we were able to
confirm them. We knew Iris would be good,
because we incorporated everything we had
learned from our demonstration satellite,
"Claire", in orbit over the past four years."
"Satellites are complex
devices and it takes time to fully characterize
instruments and optimize processing software to
filter out noise from the signal. We have just
begun that process with Iris. We expect Iris to
attain 10 times better performance than Claire
and are now even more confident that we will
validate that performance in the coming weeks."
"While other organizations
aspire to use satellites to monitor methane
emissions at high resolution, they remain years
away from launching their first satellites. Now
Iris has raised the bar even higher."
"These first results,
advancing the state of the art in satellite
monitoring of methane, are a testament to the
great work done by our technical teams and our
manufacturing partners. We are excited to
deliver new insights for our customers using
this expanded capability."
Iris is the first of a new
constellation of high-resolution satellites: the
next, Hugo is scheduled to launch later this
year, with a further 9 due to be in orbit by the
end of 2022. Each new
satellite will feature GHGSat's unique sensing
technology which is able to detect methane
emissions from sources 100 times smaller than
any other satellite, but with a resolution 100
times higher. That means GHGSat can detect and
quantify methane emissions from point sources as
small as oil & gas wells. No other commercial
operator or state-funded space organization can
do this.