Why Do Methane Emissions Occur? Towards a Predictive Framework for Risk-Targeted Mitigation in Oil and Gas Operations
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Addressing methane emissions from the oil and gas supply chain has emerged as a key near-term mitigation target. The past decade of research has improved our understanding of methane emissions, with a primary focus on quantifying emissions without describing their underlying causal mechanisms. In this work, we integrate source-specific methane emissions measurement from multiple large-area aerial surveys with source-tracked cause analyses to identify and analyze causal mechanisms that underlie observed emission patterns. Overall, 53% of all observed emissions can be attributed to specific causal categories, with the rest comprising normal operational emissions. While abnormal tank emissions were the most common cause, unloading events exhibited the highest average emission rate. Importantly, we find that large release events are not driven by fundamentally different causal mechanisms than those of small emitters, indicating that escalation due to specific operational conditions, rather than fundamentally distinct causes, drives high-magnitude emissions. In addition, we observe statistically significant quarterly and inter-operator variability in the prevalence of different causal categories, reinforcing the need for adaptive, operator-specific mitigation strategies. These findings support a shift in methane mitigation from generalized leak detection with one-size-fits-all solutions toward risk-targeted, process-informed mitigation.