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Saturday, 23 August 2014

Street View cars used to sniff out gas leaks, plots 'em on a map


Street View cars used to sniff out gas leaks, plots 'em on a map

Gas leaks are huge trouble. Leaky pipes are not only prone to exploding (which is already terrible, of course), they also spew out methane — a greenhouse gas more potent than carbon dioxide in contributing to climate change. The bad news is, nobody’s been monitoring gas leaks closely, so Google Earth Outreach and the Environmental Defense Fund teamed up to do the job back in July. Now, the results for the project’s pilot tests are out, and they confirm what everyone suspects: old gas pipes do leak a lot more than new ones. In order to effectively survey large areas, the pair attached methane-detecting sensors to Google’s famous roving vehicles: Street View cars. They then sent these dual-purpose vehicles to Boston, Indianapolis and Staten Island, whose results you can see in the images after the break.


The pair’s already working with gas companies and their regulators in hopes that these findings will help them prioritize repairs. That doesn’t mean they’re already done, though: EDF and Google plan to unleash even more methane-sniffing Street View cars to other cities in the coming months.


Boston (where the Street View car found a leak almost every mile):


Street View cars used to sniff out gas leaks, plots 'em on a map


Staten Island:


Street View cars used to sniff out gas leaks, plots 'em on a map


Indianapolis (where the gas pipes are obviously new):


Street View cars used to sniff out gas leaks, plots 'em on a map



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