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Ease Rating: Easy

Impact Rating (0-5): Impact = 0 (least) - 5 (most). This is a combination of a calculated scale and expert judgment in the absence of scientific data that directly quantifies the impact of a particular action.

5 - ~80% target progress (2,000+ kg CO2e)
4 - ~60% (1,000 - 2,000 kg CO2e)
3 - ~20% (500 - 1,000 kg CO2e)
2 - ~10% (100 - 500 kg CO2e)
1 - <10% (<100 kg CO2e)
0 - <1% (<30 kg CO2e)
0

No. of People Influenced Beyond You: 0.

Amount of Savings: n/a

Resilience Benefit: Will this action help the user avoid, reduce, or recover from the impacts of (climate-driven) disasters, and, in some cases, enable the user to help others (e.g., in a family or community)?
no

Impacts: 💪🏽 Improve Health

Categories: Energy



Description

This one is simple. Whenever you come across the smell of methane (natural gas) give a call to your local utility gas-reporting phone number or website. Not only do you prevent the risk of explosions, but it helps not waste this polluting, planet-heating substance from leaking into the air.

We hear of methane leaks from industrial piping, flaring and fracking but what does that mean? Natural gas is made primarily of methane, with a little ethane and other hydrocarbons. Industry mines and processes it for fuel, but it is a very potent greenhouse gas that overheats our world. Unfortunately most corporations and municipalities only maintain equipment to a cost-effective level. This means they may not regularly send out employees looking for leaks.

So help them by being proactive. If needed, be a pest and call about a consistent leak, even if small. We need those leaks plugged. If you are up for it, while you have them on the phone, explain why you are concerned — not just for safety, but to prevent the cooking of the planet.

Technically, when we smell natural gas we smell an additive used to create a detectable smell, as methane itself is odorless. The goal of the additive is to help find leaks before they cause an explosion.

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