Well pad-level geospatial differences in the carbon footprint and direct land use change impacts of natural gas extraction

Abstract

Thorough accounting of the climate change impacts of natural gas is crucial to guide the energy transition towards climate change mitigation, as even decarbonization roadmaps project continued natural gas use into the future. The climate change impacts of natural gas extraction have not previously been assessed at the well pad level, accounting for a multitude of geospatial differences between indidivual pads. Well pads constructed across a varied landscape lead to a range of well pad areas, earth flattening needs, well pad lifetimes, total gas production, and direct land use change (DLUC) effects such as loss of original biomass, soil organic carbon loss, change in net primary productivity, and altering the surface albedo of the site. Using existing well pad data, machine learning techniques, and satellite imagery, the spatial extents of thousands of well pads in New Mexico were delineated for site-specific data collection. A parametric life cycle assessment (LCA) model of natural gas-producing well pads was developed to integrate geospatial differences and DLUC effects, yielding scenario analysis results for each identified well pad. The DLUC effects contributed a median of 14.4% and a maximum of 59.0% to natural gas extraction carbon footprints. The use of well pad-level data revealed that the carbon footprint of natural gas extraction ranges across orders of magnitude, from 0.016 to 46.4 g CO2eq/MJ. The results highlight the need to quantify the climate change impacts of establishing a well pad and extracting natural gas case-by-case, with geographically specific data, to guide new installations towards lower emissions.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 nov 2024
Accepted
27 dec 2024
First published
30 dec 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Energy Adv., 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Well pad-level geospatial differences in the carbon footprint and direct land use change impacts of natural gas extraction

A. Sharafi and M. Fortier, Energy Adv., 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D4YA00585F

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