‘Reducing Methane Emissions from Landfills: The potential of biocover systems’ Report Released | Current Affairs | Vision IAS

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In Summary

  • CCAC report highlights biocovers as affordable solutions to mitigate landfill methane emissions, improving air quality and public health.
  • Biocovers use bacteria to oxidize methane into CO2 and water, capable of mitigating up to 50% of methane generation.
  • Landfills are a major source of methane (11% of human-made emissions), a potent greenhouse gas with risks of explosion and toxic trace components.

In Summary

This report released by the Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC) highlights how simple, relatively affordable and locally adaptable solutions like methane mitigation oxidation covers (such as biocovers) can effectively mitigate landfill methane emissions while improving air quality and public health.

  • A biocover is a microbial system which uses naturally occurring bacteria to oxidize methane into less harmful carbon dioxide and water. 
    • It is capable of mitigating up to 50% of the methane generation over a 100-year period.

Landfill Emissions

  • Landfills are one of the world’s largest and fastest-growing sources of methane, responsible for about 11% of all human-made emissions
    • Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas, and has high global warming potential (28–84 times higher than carbon dioxide).
  • Long-Term Emissions: Biodegradation of organic waste can typically take 2-3 decades, with methane emissions continuing for up to 100 years at landfill sites.
  • Risks: Methane becomes explosive at concentrations of 4.4%–16.5% in air which can trigger prolonged fire.
    • Landfill gas contains toxic trace components such as VOCs, hydrogen sulphide, and solvents that causes environmental and human health issues.

Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC)

  • It is a voluntary partnership of over 200 governments (including India), intergovernmental organizations, businesses, scientific institutions and civil society organizations.
  • Secretariat: Hosted by UN Environment Programme in Paris, France
  • Aim: To protect the climate and improving air quality by reducing the short-lived super pollutants: methane, black carbon, tropospheric ozone and HFCs. 
  • Targets: Achieve global reductions of at least 40% of methane by 2030 compared to 2010; up to 70% of black carbon by 2030 relative to 2010; and 99.5% of HFCs by 2050 compared to 2010.
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RELATED TERMS

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HFCs

Hydrofluorocarbons are potent greenhouse gases used in refrigeration, air conditioning, and aerosols. The CCAC aims for significant reductions in HFCs globally.

Short-lived super pollutants

Pollutants that remain in the atmosphere for a relatively short period (days to decades) but have a significant impact on climate change and air quality. Examples include methane, black carbon, tropospheric ozone, and HFCs.

Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC)

A voluntary partnership involving governments, intergovernmental organizations, businesses, scientific institutions, and civil society organizations, aiming to protect the climate and improve air quality by reducing short-lived super pollutants like methane and black carbon.

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