HomeNewsOpinionChina doesn’t have a solution for its methane problem 

China doesn’t have a solution for its methane problem 

The best hope of reducing methane emissions at this point may simply be the rise of renewables and population decline translating into less coal being mined and fewer cows eaten. That’s not enough to put China anywhere near the path to net-zero

November 13, 2023 / 11:55 IST
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Coal mining, China’s biggest methane-emitting sector, is the biggest culprit in Methane emission. (Source: Bloombeg)

Could the world’s biggest polluter be on the brink of cleaning up its act?

That’s the promise of an announcement from China last week of a roadmap for cutting methane emissions — but the initial draft falls short. Often neglected in climate discussions in favor of carbon dioxide, the smallest hydrocarbon molecule, with the formula CH4, is also one of the most damaging. It accounts for about a quarter of the warming we’re experiencing.

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China is the largest CH4 emitter, and the most important holdout from the Global Methane Pledge, a pact agreed at the 2021 Glasgow climate summit. Quite apart from the damage from all that pollution, China hurts its own national security by throwing away a substance that could replace about a third of its gas imports.

Unfortunately, the plan announced last week doesn’t come close to fixing the problem.  For one thing, there’s no overall target for how much current pollution should be cut, and by what date. We don’t even know what the starting line is.