MGP Policy Framework
Providing access to energy, while addressing global climate change, is one of the greatest challenges of the 21st
century.
Providing access to energy, while addressing global climate change, is one of the greatest challenges of the 21st
century.
Very often, when addressing greenhouse gas emissions from various sectors in the EU economy and in the world, a sector which is often overlooked or sidestepped is agriculture whose emissions have long proved complex to address.
The European Union (EU) agreed a climate neutrality target by 2050, including an interim 55% net Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emission reductions target by 2030.
Flaring and venting are the largest sources of methane emissions for the upstream oil and gas sector.
The European Commission (EC) adopted on 14 of October of 2020 a Communication on an EU strategy to reduce methane emissions.
Providing access to energy, while addressing global climate change, is one of the greatest challenges of the 21st century.
Very often, when addressing greenhouse gas emissions from various sectors in the EU economy and in the world, a sector which is often overlooked or sidestepped is agriculture whose emissions have long proved complex to address.
The European Union (EU) agreed a climate neutrality target by 2050, including an interim 55% net Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emission reductions target by 2030.
Flaring and venting are the largest sources of methane emissions for the upstream oil and gas sector.
The European Commission (EC) adopted on 14 of October of 2020 a Communication on an EU strategy to reduce methane emissions.
Today, the oil and gas industry has a methane-emissions data challenge.
Providing access to energy, while addressing global climate change, is one of the greatest challenges of the 21st century.