TotalEnergies宣布与国家企业签署三项减少甲烷排放合作协议

作者:
, 《油田技术》副主编


在与COP28主席国举行的“到2030年消除甲烷排放”圆桌会议上,TotalEnergies宣布与国家石油天然气公司(巴西Petrobras、阿塞拜疆SOCAR和安哥拉Sonangol)签署三项合作协议,开展甲烷检测和使用 AUSEA 技术对巴西、阿塞拜疆和安哥拉的石油和天然气设施进行测量活动。

这些协议体现了 TotalEnergies 及其合作伙伴石油和天然气公司对识别、量化和减少甲烷排放的承诺,并鼓励整个石油和天然气行业到 2030 年实现甲烷零排放。

AUSEA 气体分析仪由 TotalEnergies 及其研发合作伙伴开发,是目前世界上检测和测量甲烷排放量最准确的技术之一。

减少甲烷排放是应对气候变化的快速胜利

甲烷排放有多种来源:农业活动、化石燃料生产和使用、废物分解等。对于石油和天然气行业来说,减少碳氢化合物生产中的甲烷排放是减缓全球变暖的首要任务。

在 2010 年至 2020 年间将其运营地点的甲烷排放量减少一半后,TotalEnergies 制定了雄心勃勃的目标,加大力度,到 2025 年将甲烷排放量进一步减少 50%,并希望在 2024 年提前一年实现这一目标。 � 与去年相比,到 2030 年将减少 80%,该公司开展了一项全球活动,利用 AUSEA 技术测量其上游运营活动的甲烷排放量。

TotalEnergies 还致力于与其他国家和国际石油公司共同推广联合国石油和天然气甲烷伙伴关系 (OGMP 2.0) 框架。公司现已连续三年保持OGMP金标准地位。

自 2017 年以来,TotalEnergies 一直与研发合作伙伴(CNRS 和兰斯香槟阿登大学)合作开发先锋 AUSEA 技术(环境应用机载超光光谱仪)来检测和量化温室气体排放。

AUSEA 由微型双传感器组成,能够检测甲烷和二氧化碳排放,同时识别其来源。这种超轻型无人机技术可确保访问难以到达的排放点,同时为所有类型的工业设施(无论是陆上还是海上)提供高精度读数。与红外相机、地面传感器和卫星等传统技术相比,该技术标志着甲烷排放检测和测量的巨大变化。

国家奥委会和国际奥委会之间的合作是实现大规模甲烷减排的关键

TotalEnergies 目前正在将其 AUSEA 计划扩展到其自营资产之外。与巴西国家石油公司、阿塞拜疆国家石油公司和安哥拉国家石油公司签署的三项合作协议旨在对其运营的设施开展基于AUSEA无人机的排放测量活动,并展示为动员石油和天然气行业实现甲烷零排放而采取的具体行动。

“COP28 主席国希望动员全球经济所有主要工业部门来确保本次会议取得成功。对于石油和天然气行业来说,随着技术的发展,减少运营中的甲烷排放是当务之急。第一步是逐项测量排放量。通过向我们的合作伙伴提供我们的 AUSEA 技术,TotalEnergies 正在采取具体步骤,鼓励整个行业,包括国有企业,实现甲烷零排放,”TotalEnergies 董事长兼首席执行官 Patrick Pouyanne 说道。

在线阅读文章:https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-product/05122023/totalenergies-announces-the-signing-of- Three-cooperation-agreements-with-national-companies-to-reduce-甲烷排放量/

 

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TotalEnergies announces the signing of three cooperation agreements with national companies to reduce methane emissions

Published by , Deputy Editor
Oilfield Technology,


At the ‘Eliminating Methane Emissions by 2030’ roundtable with the COP28 Presidency, TotalEnergies announced the signing of three cooperation agreements with national oil and gas companies (Petrobras in Brazil, SOCAR in Azerbaijan and Sonangol in Angola) to carry out methane detection and measurement campaigns using the AUSEA technology on oil and gas facilities in Brazil, Azerbaijan, and Angola.

These agreements demonstrate the commitment of TotalEnergies and partnering oil and gas companies to identify, quantify and reduce methane emissions and to encourage the entire oil and gas industry to aim for zero methane emissions by 2030.

The AUSEA gas analyser, developed by TotalEnergies and its R&D partners, is currently one of the most accurate technologies in the world to detect and measure methane emissions.

Slashing down methane emissions is a quick win in the battle against climate change

Methane emissions come from multiple sources: agricultural activities, fossil fuel production and use, decomposing waste, etc. For the oil and gas sector, slashing methane emissions from hydrocarbon production is a priority in its efforts to mitigate global warming.

After halving its methane emissions from its operated sites between 2010 and 2020, TotalEnergies set ambitious targets to step up its efforts and reduce methane emissions by a further 50% by 2025 – with the ambition to reach this target a year early, in 2024 – and by 80% in 2030, compared to Last year, the company carried out a global campaign to measure methane emissions from its upstream operated activities using the AUSEA technology.

TotalEnergies is also committed to promoting the United Nations Oil and Gas Methane Partnership (OGMP 2.0) framework with other national and international oil companies. The company has now held the OGMP Gold standard status for the three years in a row.

Since 2017, TotalEnergies has been working with R&D partners (CNRS and the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne) to develop the pioneer AUSEA technology (Airborne Ultralight Spectrometer for Environmental Applications) to detect and quantify GHG emissions.

AUSEA consists of a miniature dual sensor capable of detecting methane and carbon dioxide emissions, while at the same time identifying their source. This ultralight drone-mounted technology ensures access to hard-to-reach emission points while delivering high-precision readings on all types of industrial facility, whether onshore or offshore. This technology marks a step change in methane emissions detection and measurement compared to traditional techniques such as infrared cameras, ground sensors and satellites.

Cooperation between NOC & IOC is key to achieving massive methane abatement

TotalEnergies is now expanding its AUSEA initiative beyond its own operated assets. The three cooperation agreements signed with Petrobras in Brazil, SOCAR in Azerbaijan and Sonangol in Angola aim to carry out AUSEA drone-based emissions measurement campaigns on facilities they operate and demonstrate concrete actions taken to mobilise the oil and gas industry toward zero methane emissions.

“The COP28 Presidency counts on the mobilisation of all the major industrial sectors of the global economy to ensure the success of this conference. For the oil and gas industry, cutting methane emissions from operations is a priority as technologies are available. The first step is to measure emissions, asset by asset. By making our AUSEA technology available to our partners, TotalEnergies is taking a concrete step to encourage the whole industry, including National Companies, to aim for zero methane emissions”, said Patrick Pouyanné, Chairman and CEO of TotalEnergies.

Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/05122023/totalenergies-announces-the-signing-of-three-cooperation-agreements-with-national-companies-to-reduce-methane-emissions/

 

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