More than 75 Percent of Oil and Gas Production in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico has Lower than Average Greenhouse Gas Intensity, New Analysis Finds
- Decrease in emissions intensity of oil and gas production in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico
- Utilization of new model for understanding variations in GHG intensity
- GHG intensity found to be 7 kgCO2e/boe in 2022
- None.
Emissions intensity of production expected to decline further due to continued shift towards newer and more productive operations in the deepwater, other factors
The average GHG intensity of production in the
"A relative minority of less-productive assets were found to be responsible for a disproportionate amount of emissions," said Christopher Kennett, Technical Research Associate Director, S&P Global Commodity Insights. "This trend—along with the tendency for there to be a wide variability in the GHG intensity from any one asset to the next—underscores the limits of placing too much significance on overall averages when considering the GHG intensity of any given asset."
The considerable variation in intensity levels is consistent with findings for other basins. A previous S&P Global Commodity Insights analysis of North Sea production found that basin to have an average intensity of 12 kgCO2e/boe in 2021 with individual assets ranging from less than 1 kgCO2e/boe to nearly 150 kgCO2e/boe.
The analyses are derived from a new S&P Global Commodity Insights capability that provides a novel and comprehensive approach to estimating upstream oil and gas production emissions. The new capability, built upon existing proprietary upstream databases and emerging sources such as reported emissions and satellite flaring data from the Earth Observation Group, makes it possible to estimate the totality of an upstream oil and gas play's emissions and emissions intensity—from across the play, down to individual assets and the sources of emissions, such as the fuels, that underpin each operation.
Several factors ultimately influence the GHG intensity of an asset. These include productivity, where younger and more productive fields tend to be less GHG intensive than older, more geologically challenging fields. The latter also may require energy-intensive enhanced recovery techniques, increased drilling to maintain productivity, and older technology can also put upward pressure on emissions intensity. Other factors include the degree to which operations can be electrified and the amount of venting and flaring that occurs.
In the case of the
"The share of production in the
A heightened focus on decarbonization may contribute to additional declines in GHG intensity for the basin in the coming decades. Additional declines could occur from deployment of carbon capture utilization and storage technology as well as expanded use of renewable power—such as offshore wind turbines—to provide less carbon-intensive fuel sources for production in the region, the analysis says.
* The 2 kgCO2e/boe to nearly 50 kgCO2e/boe range includes
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