Journal Article

Quantifying urban and landfill methane emissions in the United States using TROPOMI satellite data

Wang, X., D.J. Jacob, H. Nesser, . . . and D.J. Varon (2026)
Science Advances, 12(3) (doi: 10.1126/sciadv.adz9308)

Abstract / Summary:

Abstract: Urban areas are major sources of population-driven methane with high potential for mitigation, but emission quantification and sectoral attribution remain uncertain. 

Using satellite observations and a high-resolution (12 kilometers by 12 kilometers) atmospheric inversion framework, we find that emissions from 12 major US urban areas are 80% higher than the US Environmental Protection Agency Greenhouse Gas Inventory (EPA GHGI), with up to four times higher emissions in Houston but 32 to 37% lower emissions in Los Angeles and Cincinnati. 

Landfills are the principal cause of inventory underestimates, with city-level management practices driving large variations in per capita emissions. Examination of individual landfills with gas collection systems shows gas collection efficiencies averaging 38% (range: 5 to 90%), much lower than their reported average of 70% (range: 40 to 87%). An exception is Los Angeles, where we find landfill gas collection averaging 85%, suggesting large urban methane mitigation potential through improved landfill management.

Citation:

Wang, X., D.J. Jacob, H. Nesser, . . . and D.J. Varon (2026): Quantifying urban and landfill methane emissions in the United States using TROPOMI satellite data. Science Advances, 12(3) (doi: 10.1126/sciadv.adz9308) (https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adz9308)