Dark logo version highwood

Which methane technologies actually work — and which don’t?

From handheld OGI to satellites, methane detection and quantification tools all have trade-offs. This guide breaks down what’s practical, proven, and ready for your operations.

What you’ll learn

Leveraging Technology to Tackle Methane Emission

Your practical guide to methane tech options that work in the field.

…and discover how operators turn tech trade-offs into smarter methane management decisions.

We’ll never share your info. See Privacy Policy.

Green corner fade
Footer top graphic

Why this guide matters

Turn methane technology noise into clear signals

Regulators, investors, and customers expect credible methane emissions management, but tools vary widely in coverage, sensitivity, and cost. This guide shows you how to match continuous methane monitoring solutions, satellites, aircraft, drones, and OGI to your sites, budgets, and goals,so you invest in what actually works.

Compare methane detection and quantification capabilities across platforms

Build a tech stack that fits your basins, assets, and operating environment

Connect monitoring data to methane reporting software for audit-ready outputs

Green corner fade
Footer top graphic

Why Highwood

Highwood Emissions Management helps oil & gas companies navigate OGMP 2.0, EUMR, and other methane frameworks with confidence. Our combination of advanced software, expert consulting, and education accelerates compliance and makes reporting audit-ready from day one.

Proven platform

Built with industry leaders to streamline methane workflows and eliminate data gaps.

Trusted globally

Supporting companies responsible for 10%+ of global oil & gas output.

Gold Standard results

Enabled clients to achieve Level 5 reporting across complex operations.

Deep expertise

Recognized authority in methane reporting, strategy, and compliance.

Strategic advantage

Turn compliance into stronger investor confidence and competitive leadership.

Methane
Guidance

Everything you need to know about methane sources, monitoring, and mitigation.

How important is methane in net-zero targets?

Methane is crucial for near-term climate action. Reducing methane emissions, especially for O&G producers, offers fast climate benefits and is often one of the most cost-effective steps toward meeting net-zero commitments. 

Which oil and gas equipment account for most methane emissions?

Key sources include well pad equipment, compressors, storage tanks, unlit flares, and gas processing plants. A small number of large leaks from this equipment—so-called “super-emitters”—often dominate total emissions. 

What is meant by source-level vs site-level data?

Generally, source-level emissions are broken down by component (e.g., tank vent, pneumatic valve). Site-level emissions can be a total emission for an entire facility, or simply top-down measurements at the equipment group scale. Source-level data supports diagnostics and mitigation; site-level supports inventory rollup, regulatory reporting, and identification of missing or unexpected sources. 

What is materiality in emissions accounting?

Materiality refers to whether an emissions source is significant enough to meaningfully impact reported totals or decisions. Small or uncertain sources may be excluded if they fall below an established materiality threshold. 

What technologies are available for detecting methane leaks?

Highwood tracks a database of over 200 commercial technologies, including handheld systems, drones, ground-based vehicles, aircraft, satellites, and continuous monitoring systems. Each offers trade-offs in sensitivity, coverage, and cost. 

Can satellites detect methane emissions?

Yes. Modern satellites (e.g., GHGSat, TROPOMI, Carbon Mapper) can detect and quantify large methane plumes. They are most effective for super-emitter events and regional mapping and may miss small or intermittent leaks. 

How do you determine a technology’s probability of detection?

This is assessed through controlled testing or field validation—measuring how often the tech detects leaks of known size and type under varying conditions.  

How are AI and machine learning used in methane detection?

AI/ML can analyze enhance detection speed and accuracy, improve insights, and identify patterns, but still require robust training data. Reporting cannot be “black box and AI has important limitations with respect to verifiability.

What role do flare efficiency and combustion performance play?

Poor flare efficiency means that unburned methane escapes during flaring. Ensuring high combustion efficiency is essential to achieve low methane intensity. 

How do I know if my emissions data is credible?

Credibility depends on measurement quality, documentation, uncertainty analysis, and alignment with established protocols. Using third-party verification, reconciling estimates with measurements, and ensuring methodological transparency are key indicators. 

What is third-party verification and how does it work?

Verification involves an independent auditor reviewing your emissions data, methods, and assumptions. The goal is to assess credibility and transparency. It’s often required for certification, regulatory compliance, or investor assurance. 

What are the most common gaps in emissions data?

Typical gaps include missing activity data, unmeasured intermittent events, outdated emission factors, lack of uncertainty bounds, inconsistent monitoring, or unaccounted sources like episodic venting or combustion slip. 

How often should I update my emissions inventory?

At a minimum, most companies update emissions inventories annually, aligning with most reporting frameworks and regulations. However, some companies opt for monthly or quarterly internal reporting. 

How can oil and gas companies reduce their methane emissions?

Dozens of strategies exist, which include but are not limited to leak detection and repair (LDAR), replacing pneumatic devices, improving compressors, capturing vented gas, installing vapor recovery units, optimizing combustion, and deploying continuous monitoring or other technologies. 

How can I reduce emissions during routine maintenance?

Options include using temporary capture systems, reducing blowdowns, routing gas to flare or recovery units, and timing maintenance during low-pressure periods. Planning and equipment upgrades can minimize emissions from scheduled operations. 

What is the cost per tonne to reduce methane emissions?

Costs are typically measured in dollars per tonne of CO₂-equivalent reduced. Many methane mitigation measures have low or even negative costs, meaning the value of the captured gas can offset or exceed program expenses. 

How should I prioritize emission reduction opportunities?

Rank by emission magnitude, mitigation cost-effectiveness, regulatory exposure, and reputational or commercial risk. Tools like marginal abatement cost curves and scenario models (e.g., LDAR-Sim) help guide decisions. 

What is the typical timeline to build a MII?

Timelines range from several months to years, depending on data availability, measurement needs, and organizational complexity. Early planning and internal alignment accelerate the process. Highwood often helps deliver MIIs ahead of deadlines. 

Where can I get training in methane emissions management?

Highwood offers online courses via SAGA Wisdom and live custom sessions covering methane fundamentals, regulations (OGMP, MiQ, EPA), technology, mitigation, and inventory best practices—for both technical and leadership teams. 

How we've helped
our clients

“EIP’s reconciliation workflow gives us confidence in our ability to achieve the OGMP 2.0 Gold Standard.”

EIP User

“With a comprehensive emissions view, we can better allocate capital, meet targets, and demonstrate progress to stakeholders."

EIP User

Green corner fade

Choose the right methane technology — with confidence

Cut through the noise. Discover how to evaluate satellites, aerial, OGI, and continuous methane monitoring solutions and connect them seamlessly into your reporting workflow. Make smarter, faster technology decisions that reduce emissions and deliver investor-ready results.

Green fade corner

Subject

Sign me up for the Voluntary Initiatives waitlist

Subject

Sign me up for the Measurement and Reconciliation waitlist

By downloading this tool, you acknowledge that Highwood and MiQ will have access to your information and may occasionally contact you in reference to your use of the tool. Your email and personal contact information will not be shared beyond Highwood and MiQ.

Over 1,000 subscribers receive our weekly Highwood Bulletin.

Natural gas facility
Industrial emissions facility

Please fill out the form and you will receive the download link via e-mail.

Please fill out the form and you will receive the download link via e-mail.