Published on: June 24, 2024
GLOBAL GAS FLARING TRACKER REPORT
GLOBAL GAS FLARING TRACKER REPORT
NEWS – Fossil Fuel Firms Flared Most Gas Since 2019, Says World Bank
HIGHLIGHTS
Overview
- The burning of excess natural gas from global oil fields hit its highest level since 2019 last year.
- This activity produced pollutants equivalent to emissions from an extra five million cars.
- The World Bank’s Global Gas Flaring Tracker Report highlights these findings.
Key Findings
- Increase in Flaring:
- Gas flaring by oil and gas producers rose by about 7% in 2023 compared to 2022.
- Total flaring reached 148 billion cubic meters last year.
- This increase resulted in an additional 23 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions.
- Oil Production Stability:
- Oil production remained relatively stable.
- The amount of gas flared per barrel produced increased by 5%.
- This marks a reversal of reductions seen between 2021 and 2022.
Implications
- Sustainability Concerns:
- The increase in flaring undermines efforts to reduce gas flaring globally.
- The World Bank’s initiative to end routine flaring by 2030 is at risk.
- Urgent action is required to achieve zero routine flaring by the target year.
- Methane Emissions:
- The oil and gas sector is responsible for about a fifth of human-made methane emissions.
- Half of these emissions come from producers in developing nations.
- Methane, the primary component of natural gas, has over 80 times the warming power of carbon dioxide in its first 20 years in the atmosphere.
- Halting methane releases is one of the fastest, cheapest ways to lower global temperatures.
Dominant Flaring Countries
- Major Contributors:
- Nine countries accounted for 75% of flaring and 46% of global oil output:
- Russia
- Iran
- Iraq
- United States
- Venezuela
- Algeria
- Libya
- Nigeria
- Mexico
- These nations have dominated flaring globally for over a decade.
- Some have increased their gas burning intensity.
- Nine countries accounted for 75% of flaring and 46% of global oil output: