CCAC: Oil & Gas Methane Partnership
General
Name of initiative | CCAC Oil & Gas Methane Partnership (OGMP) |
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LPAA initiative | No |
NAZCA Initiative | Yes |
Website address | http://www.ccacoalition.org/en/content/ccac-oil-gas-methane-partnership |
Related initiatives | |
Starting year | 2014 |
End year | |
Secretariat | Denise Sioson, CCAC Secretariat, denise.sioson@un.org |
Organisational structure | Steering Group members are the Netherlands, Norway, United States, United Kingdom, UN Environment and Environmental Defense Fund;
Company partners are: BP, Eni, Equinor (formerly Statoil), Neptune Energy International SA (formerly EngieE&P), Pemex, PTT Public Company Limited, Repsol, Shell, Total S.A. |
Geographical coverage | Global |
Name of lead organisation | UN Environment Paris |
Type of lead organisation | United Nations or Specialised agency |
Location/Nationality of lead organisation | France |
Description
Description | "A company joining the CCAC Oil & Gas Methane Partnership voluntarily commits itself to
survey for nine core sources that account for the bulk of methane emissions in typical upstream operations: 1. Natural gas driven pneumatic devices, pumps 2. Centrifugal compressors with wet (oil) seals 3. Glycol dehydrators 4. Well venting of liquids unloading 5. Casinghead gas venting 6. Fugitive equipment and process leaks 7. Reciprocating compressor rod seal/packing 8. Hydrocarbon liquid storage tanks 9 .Well venting/flaring during well completion for hydraulically fractured wells" " |
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Objectives | To reduce methane emissions. |
Activities | The CCAC Oil & Gas Methane Partnership provides companies with a credible mechanism to systematically and responsibly address their methane. The CCAC conducted a year-long consultation process with experts from oil and gas companies, IPIECA, NGOs, reporting initiatives and other experts to develop the Partnership. The goal was to create a mechanism that met the accountability requirements of stakeholders and, at the same time, was implementable by companies and supported by governments. It has also won the endorsement of investor groups: In 2014, three international investor groups representing over $20 trillion in assets issued a joint statement calling on companies to join the CCAC Oil & Gas Methane Partnership." |
One or two success stories achieved | Nine companies are engaged in the Oil and Gas Methane Partnership representing more than 10% of the world market, with a total of 25,000 tons of methane emissions avoided over three years and over 1,260 technological changes reported by partner companies. In 2018, OGMP companies submitted their third round of annual reports to UN Environment. Like previous years, public versions will be released this fall. Nine companies reported this year, compared to eight the year before. The number of surveyed assets increased by 10 to 66 over the past year, and the number of countries in which participating assets are located is now 14, up from 9 countries the previous year. |
Monitoring and Impacts
Function of initiative | Technical dialogue, Implementation | ||||
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Activity of initiative | Technical operational implementation (ex-post), Knowledge production and innovation | ||||
Indicators |
Technical operational implementation (ex-post) — Total Mitigation
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Goals | Long-term objective: Significantly increase the number of oil & gas companies participating in the OGMP and following its protocols, and by so doing significantly reduce methane emissions from the oil and gas sector – one of the largest man-made source of methane emissions.
While participating companies are expected to eventually include all of their operated assets under the protocols of the OGMP, there is no minimum number or share of assets that a company must start with or maintain, and companies add new assets at their own pace. However, the requirement for companies to report annually the share of their assets participating gives them an incentive to add new assets at a reasonable pace. Companies help recruit other companies by emphasizing the advantages of collaboration on this issue, with opportunities to learn from each other. | ||||
Comments on indicators and goals | Partner companies started implementing some of the reduction opportunities identified during surveys of their operations, resulting in emissions reductions of 25,000 tons of methane | ||||
How will goals be achieved | |||||
Have you changed or strenghtened your goals | |||||
Progress towards the goals | The OGMP companies reports are yearly submitted in Spring and the OGMP annual reports are released in Autumn. The public summary versions of these reports may be found here: http://www.ccacoalition.org/en/content/oil-and-gas-methane-partnership-reporting
Knowledge: Developed a non-competitive platform for common research on new low carbon cements, and to involve downstream users. Knowledge products: 10 Technical Guidance documents to address 'core' methane emissions sources. Partner companies have begun implementing identified methane reduction opportunities, resulting in some 25,000 tons of methane emissions avoided as of 2017. Each company covers the cost of its own participation, including investments it makes in mitigation projects, but the cost of such investments is not part of the company reporting | ||||
How are you tracking progress of your initiative | |||||
Available reporting | Companies are required to report annually after the first full year of membership. Public summary versions of the first company-specific annual reports may be found here:
http://www.ccacoalition.org/en/content/oil-and-gas-methane-partnership-reporting |
Participants
Participants | Number | Names | ||
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Members | 28 | |||
Companies | 9 | BP (United Kingdom),Eni (Italy),Equinor (Norway),Neptune Energy International SA - formerly EngieE&P (United Kingdom),Pemex (Mexico),PTT Public Company Limited (Thailand),Repsol (Spain),Shell (United Kingdom),Total S.A. (France). | ||
Business organisations | 0 | |||
Research and educational organisations | 0 | |||
Non-governmental organisations | 6 | United Nations Environment Programme (Kenya), World Bank (USA), Environmental Defense Fund (USA), the U.S. EPA’s Natural Gas Star programme (USA), the Global Methane Initiative (USA), the World Bank’s Global Gas Flaring Reduction Initiative (USA). | ||
National states | 13 | Canada, Colombia, Nigeria, United States of America, Australia, Denmark, European Commission, France, Italy, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom, Netherlands. | ||
Governmental actors | 0 | |||
Regional / state / county actors | 0 | |||
City / municipal actors | 0 | |||
Intergovernmental organisations | 0 | |||
Financial Institutions | 0 | |||
Faith based organisations | 0 | |||
Other members | 0 | |||
Supporting partners | 0 | |||
Number of members in the years |
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Have only national states as participators | No |
Theme
Transport | Agriculture | Forestry | Business | Financial institutions | Buildings | Industry | Waste | Cities and subnational governments | Short Term Pollutants | International maritime transport | Energy Supply | Fluorinated gases | Energy efficiency | Renewable energy | Supply chain emission reductions | Adaptation | Other | Resilience | Innovation | Energy Access and Efficiency | Private Finance |
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No | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No |
Not only have national states as participators