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Everything operators need to choose the right technology, cut losses, and prove methane performance. 

Operations /
Asset Management

Navigating methane compliance without derailing field operations.

How do I meet OGMP 2.0 Level 4 or 5 requirements without disrupting daily field operations?

Compliance at these levels requires site-level quantification and source-level attribution — which can be operationally involved. The key is adopting technology and workflows that slot into existing routines with minimal overhead. Sampling strategy optimization (e.g., with LDAR-Sim) can help reduce costs and increase efficiency.

What are best practices for operationalizing EUMR methane measurement rules across diverse assets?

Consistency and scalability are critical. Successful operators use centralized procedures with localized flexibility, backed by automated data handling and standardized reporting templates.

How do I avoid overloading field teams with new methane compliance tasks?

Avoid overload by aligning compliance with existing workflows, focusing on high-priority sites, and phasing implementation. Thoughtful program design, grounded in operational realities, can significantly reduce burden on field teams.

How should I prioritize and deploy handheld, drone, aerial, satellite, and continuous monitoring technologies across regulatory and voluntary requirements?

Effective strategies harmonize LDAR and quantification goals across compliance and voluntary frameworks. Prioritization should consider detection frequency, emission duration, and site risk. Most operators benefit from a tiered, hybrid approach combining multiple technologies. Simulation and optimization can be used to refine deployment strategy.

What technologies are best for intermittent emissions detection in cold, remote, or harsh environments?

Technology performance in harsh environments is highly context-specific and constantly evolving. O&G companies should use a combination of experience and simulation tools like LDAR-Sim to evaluate options and guide operators toward fit-for-purpose solutions.

What are common pitfalls in rolling out OGMP 2.0-compliant workflows at scale?

Lack of crew buy-in, poor data traceability, and spreadsheet sprawl. Successful programs pilot first, train second, and scale in phases.

How can I prepare audit-ready records without drowning in data management?

Invest early in structured workflows that tag, timestamp, and validate methane data automatically. Build defensibility into the process, not just the report.

What’s the most field-friendly way to reconcile top-down and bottom-up methane measurements?

Use integrated analytics platforms that automate uncertainty analysis, timestamp alignment, and equipment-level cross-checks — all in one place. Having data readily available is necessary to minimize manual engagement with operations.

What causes discrepancies between field-level readings and corporate inventories?

Source attribution errors, measurement gaps, missing categories, and time mismatches are common. Site-level reconciliation needs standardized assumptions and active QA/QC.

How do I know if methane compliance investments are paying off operationally?

Watch for reduced leak response time, lower leak counts, fewer super-emitters, improved audit outcomes, and smoother cross-team collaboration — those are your ROI signals.

GHG /
Emissions

Reconciling methane inventories with scientific rigor and regulatory precision.

What’s the most defensible way to reconcile bottom-up inventories with top-down methane measurements?

There’s no single “correct” method. Defensibility comes from transparent, well-documented reconciliation that accounts for uncertainty, site-specific context, evidence/justification, and appropriate use of data. 

How do OGMP 2.0 Level 4 and 5 protocols affect how I build and validate my inventory?

OGMP 2.0 Levels 4 and 5 require integrating measurement data with bottom-up estimates, shifting toward measurement-informed inventories. This demands rigorous documentation, uncertainty quantification, and reconciliation across data sources. Validation may involve internal QA/QC or independent third-party review, so methods must be transparent, traceable, and defensible under audit. 

 

What are common sources of uncertainty in methane inventory calculations — and how do I quantify them?

Common sources of uncertainty include emission factors, activity data quality, measurement error, temporal variability, and detection limitations. Quantifying uncertainty typically involves statistical methods, scenario analysis, or Monte Carlo simulation. Transparent assumptions and documentation are essential for defensibility.

How do I know when measurement data should replace default emissions factors in my inventory?

That depends on the regulation or voluntary framework. Some require substitution when measurement is material by asset, source category, or subcategory. Others may allow flexibility.

How should I structure my inventory to comply with both OGMP and EU Methane Regulation (EUMR)?

OGMP Level 5 is an explicitly recognized compliance pathway under the EU Methane Regulation. Structure your inventory with source-level and site-level estimates, culminating in a reconciled total for material assets and those implicated under EUMR.

What are best practices for integrating third-party measurements into corporate GHG accounting process?

Require method transparency, timestamp and location metadata, and verification protocols. Document how third-party data was reconciled and incorporated, especially if used in public disclosures.

What’s the best way to manage multiple datasets from handheld, drone, aircraft, satellite, and continuous monitors?

Use a normalized data model with standardized source categories, units, and timestamps. Track metadata and uncertainty, and link each measurement to specific sites and sources. Reconciliation workflows help integrate diverse datasets into a consistent, auditable inventory.

How do I structure a QA/QC process for methane emissions data?

Create traceable workflows with log files, versioned inputs, sensor calibration records, and reconciliation steps. Independent validation strengthens credibility.

What metrics or KPIs should I track to evaluate inventory accuracy and improvement over time?

Track event counts, data completeness, uncertainty bands, percentage of inventory supported by measurements, and reconciliation delta between predicted and observed values.

How do I explain methane inventory updates or revisions to internal stakeholders and regulators?

Anchor explanations in method changes, updated measurement campaigns, or improved uncertainty modeling — and show version comparisons with rationale and impact quantification.

ESG /
Sustainability

Aligning methane disclosures with ESG strategy and investor expectations.

How do I ensure methane reporting aligns with investor-grade ESG disclosure standards?

Most ESG standards are high-level and don’t specify methane methodologies. To align with investor expectations, ensure your reporting is transparent, consistent, and traceable. Reference credible frameworks like OGMP 2.0, MiQ, and Veritas, use measurement-informed data where material, and clearly document methods, assumptions, and uncertainties. Third-party validation and audit-ready records help build credibility.

What’s the role of OGMP 2.0 in ESG storytelling and market credibility?

Achieving Level 4 or 5 under OGMP 2.0 signals serious commitment to transparent, science-based methane disclosure — a strong signal to investors, regulators, and buyers.

What frameworks should methane reporting align with to satisfy ESG and regulatory audiences?

Align methane reporting with OGMP 2.0, which is increasingly expected by investors. Implementing OGMP 2.0 transparently can also satisfy requirements under Veritas, MiQ, the EU Methane Regulation, and other measurement-informed frameworks. Compliance with local regulations is a basic expectation for investors.

How can I position our methane performance to ratings agencies and sustainability indexes?

Highlight not just absolute emissions, but methodology improvements, audit-readiness, and measurement coverage. Contextualize performance within your peers and show year-over-year improvement. 

What metrics or KPIs resonate most with ESG analysts when evaluating methane performance?

ESG analysts look for clear, comparable metrics such as methane intensity (e.g., kg CH₄ per BOE), absolute emissions trends, percentage of emissions measured vs. estimated, and alignment with targets. They also value disclosure of reduction plans, reconciliation practices, and adherence to frameworks like OGMP 2.0 or MiQ.

How do I handle third-party measurement data in our ESG reporting?

Treat third-party data like any other measurement input: assess its quality, relevance, and uncertainty. Clearly document the data source, methodology, and how it’s integrated into your inventory. Transparency is key—explain how third-party data influences results, especially if it drives significant changes.

How do I explain changes to methane inventory numbers across reporting cycles?

Use side-by-side disclosures showing methodological changes, measurement upgrades, or reconciliation improvements. It’s common for estimates to rise as measurement improves, reflecting better data, not worse performance. Transparency about why numbers change builds trust with regulators, investors, and the public.

How can I simplify methane data for boardroom and investor presentations?

Focus on trendlines, material risks, and compliance progress. Use plain language summaries with appendices for technical detail. 

What do investors want to see in methane disclosures that compliance reports don’t usually cover?

Investors often look for clarity on long-term risk, strategy, and performance—not just compliance. They want to see credible reduction plans, use of high-quality measurement, trend data over time, and how methane fits into broader climate goals. Transparent assumptions, third-party validation, and alignment with voluntary frameworks like OGMP 2.0 or MiQ can help build trust beyond regulatory minimums.

What’s the reputational risk of poor methane reporting — and how do I mitigate it?

Inconsistent data, unexplained variances, surprises in public datasets, and late disclosures can erode trust. Mitigate by standardizing across business units, building defensible narratives, and engaging early with key stakeholders. 

Compliance /
Regulatory Affairs

Staying ahead of methane regulation without exposing the business.

What are the key differences between OGMP 2.0 and the EU Methane Regulation?

OGMP 2.0 is voluntary and focused on transparency and continuous improvement. The EU Methane Regulation is mandatory with specific requirements domestically and for importers that implicate international producers. OGMP Level 5 is accepted under EUMR, but EUMR’s requirements extend beyond OGMP 2.0.

What are U.S. Subpart W and OOOOb/c rules for upstream methane monitoring?

Subpart W is a federal GHG reporting rule requiring detailed source-level methane data. OOOOb/c are EPA performance standards mandating routine LDAR, monitoring, and timely repairs at new and existing facilities. Both rules increase regulatory oversight and drive more rigorous methane management.

How do I prepare for enforcement under the EU Methane Regulation (EUMR)?

Compliance under EUMR differs for EU’s domestic operators, importers, exporters, and international producers. Necessary steps will depend on where you operate, the nature of your contracts, and other factors.

How do I coordinate compliance efforts across jurisdictions with conflicting or overlapping methane rules?

Harmonize reporting practices using the most stringent applicable standards as a baseline. Centralize workflows and enable modular reporting to address different requirements with shared data.

What does ‘legal-readiness’ mean for methane measurement and reporting workflows?

Legal readiness refers to the ability of oil and gas operators to comply with existing and upcoming regulations regarding methane emissions. This involves having the necessary systems, processes, and technologies in place to accurately measure, monitor, report, and verify methane emissions in a way that stands up to legal scrutiny.

How should I approach third-party measurement vendors from a liability standpoint?

Vet vendors on data methodology, availability of controlled release testing, and regulatory alignment. Ensure contracts cover data ownership, audit access, and legal defensibility in case of discrepancies.

What are common pitfalls that trigger regulatory penalties or enforcement actions?

Missing records, inconsistent measurement methods, lack of repair documentation, or underreported emissions. Most enforcement findings stem from weak internal controls — not bad intent.

How should I handle revisions to past methane reports in a way that limits legal exposure?

Document all changes transparently, cite methodological updates, and notify affected stakeholders promptly. Include version control and a signed compliance rationale.

What’s the role of regulatory engagement and advocacy in shaping feasible methane rules?

Ongoing engagement ensures industry perspectives are heard and future rules reflect operational realities. Join coalitions, contribute to consultations, and track global alignment trends.

C-Suite /
Finance & Risk

Making the business case for methane and GHG investments.

How does methane performance affect access to international markets like the EU?

Regulations like the EU Methane Regulation require verified emissions data for cross-border operations. Non-compliance risks penalties, reputational damage, and restricted market access for exported fuels.

How do ESG investors evaluate methane management — and why does it impact cost of capital?

Many institutional investors now screen for OGMP 2.0 participation, methane intensity, and third-party verification. Strong methane controls can unlock ESG-linked financing and lower capital costs.

What are the financial benefits of reducing methane emissions?

Reducing emissions captures otherwise lost product, improving sales and operational efficiency. It can also reduce compliance penalties, improve market access, improve access to capital, and improve safety. 

What’s the ROI of investing in more accurate methane measurement technologies?

Benefits include avoided fines, fewer re-surveys, enhanced asset valuation, and increased investor confidence — all contributing to risk-adjusted financial returns.

What’s the typical payback period for top-down technologies like aerial and continuous monitoring?

It varies widely based on site size, leak frequency, gas value, and operational costs. In high-emitting or remote sites, payback can be under a year. For others, value comes from compliance, safety, and avoided production losses.

How can I model long-term cost savings from automating methane data collection and reporting?

Model cost savings by comparing current manual workflows—LDAR, data entry, reconciliation, and reporting—with automated alternatives. Factor in reduced labor, fewer site visits, faster reporting, and improved compliance. Tools like scenario analysis can help quantify long-term value.

How should I prioritize methane investments across assets from a financial standpoint?

Use a capital allocation model that factors in asset value, regulatory risk, emissions intensity, and investor visibility — prioritizing high-ROI, high-exposure basins and sites.

How do I evaluate technology or data vendors in terms of financial value — not just features?

Evaluate vendors by total cost of ownership—hardware, maintenance, data access, and integration. Use simulation tools like LDAR-Sim to model financial impact, including avoided emissions, compliance savings, and reduced labor. Focus on real-world outcomes and ROI, not just technical features.

What are the hidden costs of methane non-compliance?

These include litigation risk, reputational drag on equity valuation, delayed project approvals, potential exclusion from ESG-aligned investment products, and market access.

What metrics should I use to demonstrate methane ROI to boards?

Use metrics like methane intensity, emissions reductions, avoided product loss, compliance cost savings, and technology payback period. Framing these in financial and operational terms helps boards understand ROI, risk mitigation, and alignment with climate and ESG goals.

How do I shift methane investments from “compliance spend” to “strategic value driver” in the eyes of the board?

Reframe the narrative around risk reduction, capital access, market eligibility, and long-term valuation resilience, all supported by defensible data and financial clarity.

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. 

OGMP
Guidance

Answering your questions about OGMP 2.0 requirements, strategy, and implementation.

What is OGMP 2.0 Gold Standard?

OGMP 2.0 Gold Standard is the highest achievement level in the UN-led Oil & Gas Methane Partnership framework. It requires Level 5 reporting for all material assets, meaning facility-level, measurement-informed inventories with uncertainty quantification and third-party verification. Gold Standard demonstrates leadership in methane transparency and emissions accuracy. 

How hard is it to achieve OGMP 2.0 Gold Standard status?

It requires comprehensive, facility-level inventories informed by measurements (Level 5), plus robust monitoring, uncertainty quantification, and third-party assurance. Challenging but achievable with proper planning, data, and support. 

What qualifies as a “material” asset under OGMP 2.0?

Material assets are those that contribute significantly to a company’s methane emissions. OGMP 2.0 requires operators to identify and report on all material assets, typically defined by emissions volume, production scale, or strategic importance. These assets must meet the framework’s level-specific reporting requirements. 

What are the documentation requirements under OGMP 2.0?

OGMP 2.0 requires clear documentation of inventory scope, methodologies, data sources, assumptions, and uncertainty quantification. For Level 4 and 5, operators must submit facility-level data with evidence of measurement planning, QA/QC processes, and reconciliation steps. Third-party verification requires audit-ready records and transparent traceability. 

How do I meet OGMP 2.0 Level 4 or 5 requirements without disrupting daily field operations?

Compliance at these levels requires site-level quantification and source-level attribution — which can be operationally involved. The key is adopting technology and workflows that slot into existing routines with minimal overhead. Sampling strategy optimization (e.g., with LDAR-Sim) can help reduce costs and increase efficiency.

What are common pitfalls in rolling out OGMP 2.0-compliant workflows at scale?

Lack of crew buy-in, poor data traceability, and spreadsheet sprawl. Successful programs pilot first, train second, and scale in phases.

How do I structure a measurement plan for OGMP 2.0 Level 5?

A Level 5 measurement plan should define target sources and sites, technology selection, measurement frequency, and QA/QC protocols. The plan must support site-level quantification and reconciliation, and should be tailored to asset characteristics. Simulation tools and expert guidance can reduce cost and uncertainty. 

What types of measurement technologies are accepted by OGMP 2.0?

OGMP 2.0 is technology-neutral but emphasizes credible, well-documented methods. Accepted technologies include handheld detection tools, drones, aircraft, satellites, and continuous monitors — provided they meet quality thresholds and are supported by uncertainty analysis. Combining multiple methods is often required for Level 4 or 5. 

How do OGMP 2.0 Level 4 and 5 protocols affect how I build and validate my inventory?

OGMP 2.0 Levels 4 and 5 require integrating measurement data with bottom-up estimates, shifting toward measurement-informed inventories. This demands rigorous documentation, uncertainty quantification, and reconciliation across data sources. Validation may involve internal QA/QC or independent third-party review, so methods must be transparent, traceable, and defensible under audit.

How should I structure my inventory to comply with both OGMP and EU Methane Regulation (EUMR)?

OGMP Level 5 is an explicitly recognized compliance pathway under the EU Methane Regulation. Structure your inventory with source-level and site-level estimates, culminating in a reconciled total for material assets and those implicated under EUMR.

How do OGMP 2.0, MiQ, and Veritas differ from each other?

OGMP 2.0 is a UN-led reporting framework for improving measurement and transparency. MiQ is a certification program for marketing low-methane gas. Veritas provides open-source methodologies for calculating methane intensity. Many companies use them in combination for reporting, certification, and internal management. 

How do I align my OGMP 2.0 submission with CDP, SEC, TCFD, or other reporting frameworks?

While frameworks vary in focus, OGMP 2.0 data can often be repurposed for other disclosures. For example, OGMP supports science-based targets under CDP, and measurement-informed data aligns with SEC and TCFD transparency expectations. Standardizing your inventory architecture simplifies cross-framework reporting.

Highwood
Platform & Services

Translating methane complexity into strategic advantage with Highwood.

What services does Highwood offer to oil & gas operators?

Highwood specializes in measurement-informed inventories, providing methane strategy consulting, measurement planning, data reconciliation, regulatory navigation, software (EIP), inventory development, training, and voluntary initiative support (e.g., OGMP 2.0, MiQ, Veritas readiness), and harmonization efforts. 

How does Highwood help prepare for OGMP 2.0 compliance?

Highwood offers both consulting and software services designed specifically for OGMP 2.0. Highwood builds facility-level inventories, develops source-level plans, supports measurement planning, reconciles data, quantifies uncertainty, and generates audit-ready reports that meet OGMP 2.0 Level 5 and Gold Standard expectations. 

What kind of clients does Highwood work with?

Clients range from upstream oil producers to LNG exporters, including supermajors, independents, midstream firms, industry associations, and governments. Highwood works globally with clients seeking credible methane data, compliance strategies, or competitive advantage. 

How does Highwood conduct emissions reconciliation?

Highwood compares bottom-up inventories with top-down measurements, identifies divergence, updates assumptions, quantifies uncertainty, and aligns reported and observed values. The result is a more defensible, audit-ready inventory. 

What does a Highwood consulting engagement look like?

Highwood works with each client to define the right scope, whether that’s building a measurement-informed inventory, supporting regulatory compliance, evaluating technologies, training teams, or all of the above. Some projects are short-term and tactical; others are multi-year partnerships supporting strategy, operations, and reporting across global portfolios. 

What is EIP and how does it support methane inventory development?

EIP (Emissions Inventory Platform) is Highwood’s SaaS for building, managing, and reconciling measurement-informed inventories. It streamlines data ingestion, uncertainty quantification, reconciliation workflows, and audit-ready reporting — aligned with OGMP 2.0, EUMR, and other frameworks. 

How does Highwood support EUMR compliance?

Highwood helps clients meet EU Methane Regulation requirements through inventory readiness, technology planning, recordkeeping workflows, and alignment with OGMP Level 5 — which is an accepted compliance pathway under the regulation. 

What methane training programs does Highwood offer?

Highwood offers both online and in-person training tailored to field teams, compliance leads, and executives. Topics include methane science, regulatory frameworks, technology selection, inventory methods, and ESG reporting. 

How does Highwood help clients select and evaluate methane detection technologies?

Highwood maintains a technology-agnostic database of over 200 commercial solutions. Using tools like LDAR-Sim, Highwood helps clients simulate, compare, and optimize tech deployment based on asset type, leak profile, and regulatory goals. 

What makes Highwood different from other methane service providers?

Highwood delivers the only solution built with — and for — the oil & gas industry, combining:   

  • A proven platform engineered to eliminate methane data gaps and guesswork 
  • Industry-leading consulting expertise with deep regulatory, technical and strategic insight, and 
  • A track record of enabling clients to achieve OGMP 2.0 Gold Standard with Level 5 reporting 

That’s why Highwood is trusted by companies responsible for more than 10% of global oil & gas production. 

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