VANDENBERG
SPACE FORCE BASE, Calif., Aug. 16,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, the Carbon Mapper
Coalition's first satellite, Tanager-1, was successfully launched
into orbit on the SpaceX Transporter-11 Rideshare mission. The
satellite was developed by Planet Labs (NYSE: PL) with
technology from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). The launch
marks a critical milestone in Carbon Mapper's work to drive local
action on methane and CO2 super-emitters, globally.
The Tanager-1 satellite will grow
transparency of methane super-emitters — pinpointing leaks so
society can act now to stop them.
Tanager-1 is the first of a series of satellites being developed
and deployed through a unique public-private partnership powered by
philanthropy that brings together diverse technical, scientific,
engineering and policy expertise to accomplish bold emission
reduction objectives. The coalition, led by the nonprofit Carbon
Mapper, includes JPL, Planet Labs, RMI and Arizona State University alongside philanthropic
supporters including High Tide Foundation, Grantham Foundation for
the Protection of the Environment, Bloomberg Philanthropies,
Children's Investment Fund Foundation and Zegar Family Foundation,
among others.
"There is more momentum than ever to act on climate. But a lack
of public and private investment in global methane and
CO2 monitoring has left gaps that leave many
emissions untracked and unaddressed," said Richard Lawrence, Founder and Executive Chairman
of High Tide Foundation. "With the launch of Tanager-1 we are
scaling up high impact monitoring to drive transparency of
super-emitters everywhere and grow society's collective capacity to
be a big part of the solution."
"Data from this satellite will dramatically improve our ability
to pinpoint leaks of methane and CO2 and ensure action
is taken to stop them," said Michael R.
Bloomberg, the United Nations Secretary-General's Special
Envoy on Climate Ambition and Solutions and Founder of Bloomberg
L.P. and Bloomberg Philanthropies. "It's a great example of how new
technology can lead to more transparency and faster progress in
cutting emissions — which is needed to avoid the worst impacts of
climate change."
Methane is over 80 times more powerful at retaining heat in the
atmosphere than CO2, contributing to about 30% of global
temperature rise to date. Given its outsized climate impact and
relatively short lifespan (methane lasts about a decade in the
atmosphere), addressing methane is best down payment society can
make today to slow the rate of global temperature rise.
Tanager's unique capabilities complement other emissions-detecting
sensors in orbit by zooming in on methane super-emitters —
facilities or equipment that emit >100 kilograms per hour —
across the fossil fuel, waste and agriculture sectors. The
Tanager-1 satellite will provide observations with unprecedented
granularity to empower industry, policymakers, regulators, and
civil society to take actions that reduce emissions at the source.
In addition to slowing climate change, mitigating methane will
dramatically improve air quality by reducing co-emitted toxic air
pollutants, protecting vulnerable communities and improving public
health.
"Methane super-emitters represent a disproportionate climate
risk and opportunity — contributing up to 20–60% of a region's
total emissions in some sectors. We have shown that finding and
fixing these emissions can result in large reductions that, with
sustained monitoring, can stay mitigated," said Riley Duren, Carbon Mapper Co-Founder and CEO.
"Observations from Tanager will enable Carbon Mapper to grow its
publicly available data, and this first satellite is an exciting
step toward our goal to scale up a full constellation of satellites
to detect and track up to 90% of super-emitting sources globally
with daily frequency or better."
Through years of regional demonstration pilots leveraging
aircraft equipped with imaging spectrometers (including
Arizona State University Center for
Global Discovery and Conservation Science's Global Airborne
Observatory and JPL's AVIRIS-NG), Carbon Mapper found that nearly
half of super-emitting events flagged for state agencies and
operators were previously unknown, and once identified, were able
to be mitigated.
"The launch of Tanager-1 continues the crucial work of locating
greenhouse gas emissions sources with a degree of resolution that
will enable stakeholders to take action," said James Graf,
director of JPL's Earth Science and Technology Directorate.
"We are excited to see the JPL imaging
spectrometer technology providing direct societal impact. We
also see great promise in tackling other environmental challenges
through public-private partnerships as demonstrated by the Carbon
Mapper Coalition."
"The Tanager-1 mission will use incredible technology to
pinpoint emitters and guide action to stop them. This is a
remarkable coalition that we are incredibly proud to be a part of,"
said Will Marshall, Co-Founder and
CEO of Planet. "Combining cutting-edge imaging spectrometer
technology from JPL with an innovative smallsat bus from Planet and
data processing from Carbon Mapper, the consortium itself is a
powerful example of actors coming together to solve hard world
challenges. We expect its impact on methane emitters to have a
lasting, positive impact on the planet."
A core part of Carbon Mapper's mission is making its methane and
CO2 data and insights available on its public online
portal for noncommercial use. Today, the portal includes tens of
thousands of plumes observed from air and space and soon will
include methane data from Tanager-1. With this powerful tool, the
organization is advancing data transparency and accessibility that
can strengthen societal awareness on the exact sources of
emissions, prompt mitigation action, improve accountability,
prioritize solutions and investments, and help us reduce emissions
quickly to meet bold climate goals.
Special Note to Reporters:
More information, including
image and video footage can be found in our press package here.
About Carbon Mapper
Carbon Mapper is a nonprofit based in Pasadena, CA with the mission to drive
greenhouse gas emissions reductions by making methane and carbon
dioxide data accessible and actionable. Carbon Mapper is focused on
filling gaps in the emerging ecosystem of methane and
CO2 monitoring systems by delivering data at facility
scale that is precise, timely, and accessible to empower
science-based decision making and action. The organization leads a
public-private partnership including Planet Labs, PBC, NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, California Air Resources Board, RMI, and
Arizona State University among others
focused on developing and deploying a constellation of satellites
capable of detecting, quantifying, and verifying methane emissions
worldwide. Data from these satellites will offer the next major
step in scaling up the thousands of methane plumes and
CO2 plumes already publicly available on the Carbon
Mapper data portal. Learn more at carbonmapper.org, view our data
at data.carbonmapper.org, and follow us on Twitter
@carbonmapper.
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SOURCE Carbon Mapper Inc.