Nonprofit and partners announce plan to develop additional capacity to help pinpoint the majority of global methane emissions from oil and gas, coal, waste, and agriculture.
PASADENA, Calif., April 30, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Today, the nonprofit Carbon Mapper announced plans to develop and deploy new technology in its remote-sensing constellation, growing the organization’s ability to monitor and mitigate methane and other pollutants to address climate change and benefit human health.
Carbon Mapper logo (PRNewsfoto/Carbon Mapper Inc.)
As part of its longstanding strategy to scale a multi-tiered emission-observing system, Carbon Mapper has led the development of an Advanced Emissions Monitoring Imaging Spectrometer (AEMIS) with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), which Carbon Mapper will soon deploy on aircraft. Planet will integrate this same technology on a specialized Tanager satellite optimized to detect a wider range of atmospheric gases.
This AEMIS technology will uniquely:
Expand pinpoint detection of methane super-emitters: Thanks to improvements in spectrometer design and optimization for infrared wavelengths (where methane absorbs solar radiation), this technology will dramatically increase the fraction of methane point sources that can be detected, attributed, and quantified.
Increase visibility of methane emissions across multiple scales: Allowing society to quantify sources that have historically been more difficult to measure using satellites, such as diffuse area emissions in the agriculture, waste, oil and gas, and coal sectors. When deployed on aircraft, AEMIS technology will improve quantification of many of these sources while expanding granular facility-scale measurements that are critical for making data attributable and actionable.
Improve sampling frequency: Increasing the revisit rate of super-emitting sites to give more insights into variable emissions.
Provide data on other atmospheric pollutants: Detecting and measuring other gases that have a significant impact on climate change, local air quality, and health.
Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas that has accounted for about 30% of global warming to date. Rapid and sustained reductions in methane emissions are key to limiting near-term warming and improving air quality.
“As climate impacts such as the increasing intensity of fire and extreme weather continue to grow, there is global urgency to pull the emergency brake on methane — a climate-warming super-pollutant — within this decade,” said Carbon Mapper CEO Riley Duren. “In response, Carbon Mapper is delivering on our long-standing plans to expand the remote sensing constellation that allows us to accelerate our public-good mission to fill gaps in the growing ecosystem of emissions data, and drive emission reductions by translating data to action.”
