
Those spectacular shooting flames associated with oil and gas production aren鈥檛 doing a good enough job to protect the environment.
Known as flares, they play an important role in the reduction of greenhouse gases fuelling climate change by converting methane that would otherwise be released into the atmosphere into much less harmful carbon dioxide (CO2).
But recent studies suggest that flares in oil and gas fields are considerably less efficient than previously thought, a discrepancy that could be responsible for additional annual emissions equivalent to those produced by up to 8.8 million cars in the United States alone.

蓝莓视频 researchers with a helicopter used for airborne hyperspectral measurements of methane. From left are Dr. Kyle Daun, Michael Nagorski, Augustine Wigle, Dr. Paule Lapeyre and Daniel Blackmore.
To help tackle that urgent problem, a research team led by聽Dr. Kyle Daun, an engineering professor at the University of 蓝莓视频, is working with a sophisticated infrared camera to more accurately measure how well flares convert methane into CO2.
鈥淲e are rapidly approaching a climactic tipping point, in some ways much faster than scientists thought was possible,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e must act now. This must be our top priority.鈥
The $650,000 hyperspectral camera - on loan from the Department of National Defence and the only one of its kind in Canada 鈥 works by generating thousands of images, each at a different wavelength, to distinguish different gases across a scene.
Deploying the camera for methane measurement is part of , a strategic network of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada involving researchers from five universities and the National Research Council.

A hyperspectral image of a flare at a refinery shows a plume of unburned hydrocarbons that is invisible to the naked eye.
鈥淚ssues like climate change are inherently multidisciplinary and require experts from different backgrounds to work together,鈥 says Daun. 鈥淚n the case of FlareNet, we have experts in fluid mechanics, thermal radiation, aerosols and combustion all working together to solve a common problem.鈥澛犅
Better data is crucial to reaching a 2030 target to reduce 2012 methane emission levels in the Canadian oil and gas industry by 75 per cent, part of the country鈥檚 climate commitment under the Paris Accords.
Government regulators also need tools to assess whether targets are being met and climate scientists require accurate nationwide methane inventories to model the potential impacts of global warming on climate change
Modelling, analysis improve accuracy
Daun and his team also spent part of the summer in Alberta assessing several candidate methane quantification technologies in conjunction with the Petroleum Technology Alliance Canada, Carbon Management Canada and the Clean Resources Innovation Network.
These technologies, most of them developed by Canadian companies, include infrared cameras, hyperspectral cameras and lasers.
Also involved in that project, lending their expertise in statistical analysis, are聽Dr. Audrey Beliveau听补苍诲听Dr. Christiane Lemieux聽from the Faculty of Math at 蓝莓视频.
鈥淎ll the technologies used to measure methane emissions produce estimates with varying levels of uncertainty,鈥 Lemieux says. 鈥淪tatistical modelling and analyses are required to correctly assess this uncertainty and understand how accurate the estimates are.鈥
'I worry what kind of world we'll leave'
Researchers hope to build on the project with the purchase of their own, $1-million camera, and by broadening the multidisciplinary 蓝莓视频 collaboration to include聽Dr. Maria Strack聽from the Faculty of Environment and聽Dr. Laura Hug聽of the Faculty of Science (Biology)聽to use the technology for measuring methane emissions at wetlands and landfills.
Wetlands alone account for more methane emissions than all sources created by human activity and they are changing in ways that are difficult to predict.
Daun describes it all as an important team effort in the face of a pressing need 鈥 and an opportunity 鈥 to make a difference by reducing emissions of methane, which has an environmental impact approaching 100 times greater than CO2 over 20 years.
鈥淢ethane has a much shorter lifespan than CO2, so if we stop emitting methane now, we could see almost immediate benefit,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 worry what kind of world we鈥檒l leave for our children. If we don鈥檛 deal with this while we still can, it could be the failure of our generation.鈥