Here's an extremely obvious point (from SLATE) that needs to be emphasized.
>> Hot Air
The big problem with vehicles that run on natural gas: methane.

By Uven Chong <http://www.slate.com/authors.uven_chong.html>|Posted
Thursday, Aug. 15, 2013, at 7:16 AM

On a sweltering Tuesday afternoon in June in Washington, D.C., President
Obama unveiled “a plan to lead the world in a coordinated assault on a
changing 
climate<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-06-25/-we-need-to-act-transcript-of-obama-s-climate-change-speech.html>.”
His speech was complemented by a plethora of visual exclamation points.
Acknowledging the heat, Obama took off his jacket and paused several times
to wipe the sweat off his brow. After a first term in which many
environmental supporters felt
neglected<http://www.nationaljournal.com/magazine/why-it-finally-makes-political-sense-to-talk-about-climate-change-20130725>,
the speech suggested that the Obama administration is finally ready to
spend some political capital on climate change.

A large [tenet] of Obama’s energy plan is to promote the use of shale
natural gas that has recently become accessible due to advances in drilling
technology (that is, fracking). This appears to be working. A recent
report<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324763404578430751849503848.html>by
the U.S. Energy Information Administration shows that carbon dioxide
emissions in the United States are steadily decreasing in large part to the
substitution of coal with natural gas. More recently, the *Economist* has
also enthusiastically
embraced<http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21582516-worlds-thirst-oil-could-be-nearing-peak-bad-news-producers-excellent>the
potential of natural gas to replace demand for oil.

However, shale exploitation is not without critics, and rightfully so. In
terms of climate change, there are two main objections to shale gas. One is
in the process of digging up the gas and moving it to fuel stations through
pipelines, and the second is in the use of the gas itself. The former gets
most of the attention, but the latter could also have significant
implications, especially if predictions of increased natural gas vehicle
adoption come to fruition.

The first argument against shale gas is that the extraction and pipeline
transport process of shale results in leaked methane, a greenhouse gas that
is stronger than carbon dioxide. In April 2011, researchers at Cornell
published a study
<http://www.eeb.cornell.edu/howarth/web/Marcellus.html>that concluded
that if methane leaks are considered, natural gas
contributes *more* to global warming than oil or coal.

The exact quantity of so-called “fugitive methane” continues to be
hotly<http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/06/12/column-kemp-shale-emissions-idUSL5N0EO2FB20130612>
debated<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/29/opinion/gangplank-to-a-warm-future.html?_r=0>,
but the good news is that there seems to be an emerging consensus that
containing the leaks is neither difficult nor expensive. In April 2013, the
EPA lowered its
estimates<http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2013/04/28/epa-methane-report-further-divides-fracking-camps/Ft7DVUvAHE6zctsgbcGuZN/story.html>of
methane leakage from natural gas production in part due to voluntary
industry-imposed methane control measures, such as better-sealed
replacement gaskets.

But there’s a second problem here, one that hasn’t received nearly as much
attention as fugitive pipeline methane leaks: methane emissions from *in-use
* natural gas.

Over the past decade, there has been an increase in the adoption of natural
gas vehicles in bus and truck fleets. Most recently in December 2012, the
San Diego Metropolitan Transit System Board of Directors announced a
planned<http://www.kpbs.org/news/2012/dec/13/san-diego-transit-buy-500-new-natural-gas-buses/>$343
million and 500-bus transformation of its transit bus fleet to
compressed natural gas. The *New York Times* recently
reported<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/23/business/energy-environment/natural-gas-use-in-long-haul-trucks-expected-to-rise.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0>that
there is momentum in the trucking industry to adopt natural gas
vehicles, as the increase in shale gas supply has made the fuel cheap and
economically attractive. As an added marketing incentive, most transit
agencies trumpet their natural gas vehicle investments to
burnish<http://web.mta.info/nyct/facts/ffenvironment.htm#clean_bus>their
green
credentials<http://thesource.metro.net/2013/04/22/metro-innovation-in-sustainability/>
.

What those bragging campaigns fail to mention, however, are the methane
emissions that have been reported by several
studies<http://journals.oregondigital.org/trforum/article/download/2131/1901>.
The emissions occur when the natural gas is actually combusted to create
energy (such as in the engine of a natural gas vehicle). Just as
hydrocarbons, for example, are belched out by gasoline and diesel vehicles
today <http://auto.howstuffworks.com/air-pollution-from-cars.htm>, methane
is a pollutant that is emitted by natural gas vehicles. Vehicle emissions
are highest when operating conditions are unsteady or dynamic, such as when
a cool engine is first turned on or when an engine has to speed up. That’s
particularly worrisome if natural gas vehicles like transit buses or
freight trucks are operated in urban environments and are subject to a lot
of stops and starts that could result in methane emissions. One
study<http://www.catf.us/resources/publications/view/162>of compressed
natural gas buses even suggests that when methane is
considered, the total global warming impact for natural gas vehicles could
be *greater* than current diesel buses. The methane impact from smaller
vehicles (such as passenger cars) is unclear, as most studies have been
conducted on heavy-duty trucks and buses. However, since the current
interest in natural gas vehicles is predominantly coming from freight and
bus companies, tailpipe methane emissions from these studies are still
relevant. Yet, amid the optimism for natural gas, it seems that these
results have been outshined by the bright promise of a fuel that can ease
the tension between economic cost and environmental protection.

The threat of methane emissions should not necessarily spell the end of
natural gas vehicles. One clear solution is to develop a catalyst that is
able to reduce methane. Catalysts are devices that cause chemical reactions
in a vehicle’s exhaust to eliminate many of the toxic air pollutants that
result from cars and trucks. Much in the same way that catalysts are used
in diesel or gasoline engines to chemically convert exhaust gases to meet
federal emissions limits, a catalyst could be designed to break down
methane to solve this suffocating issue.

But this is easier said than done because existing catalysts are not
effective at reducing methane, a very stable compound that is resistant to
chemical reaction. Researchers at the University of Trieste, the University
of Pennsylvania, and the University of Cadiz recently published promising
findings <http://www.greencarcongress.com/2012/08/cargnello-20120813.html>of
a new catalyst using palladium and ceria that can reduce methane. The
solution is not yet commercially feasible, but the results are
promising. Methane
emissions limits <http://www.dieselnet.com/standards/us/fe_hd.php> have
also been developed by the U.S. EPA and will be implemented starting with
model year 2014 vehicles. These regulatory actions will spur on new research
programs <http://wvutoday.wvu.edu/n/2013/03/04/scemr-release> to
comprehensively measure methane emissions from natural gas fleets and
ensure that natural gas is a truly climate-friendly alternative fuel.

To be clear, there are political, economic, and environmental advantages to
natural gas use, which make it a potentially important tool in the fight
against climate change. But in the context of urban transportation fleets,
we need to be mindful that natural gas could be a methane-filled Trojan
horse, a deceptively veiled prop that ultimately proves destructive. <<

-- 
Jim Devine /  "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it,
doesn't go away." -- Philip K. Dick
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