
ABB sensor onboard SpaceX rocket to detect greenhouse gas emissions
by CM Staff

An additional nine units are currently under manufacture at ABB to be launched by the end of 2022

ABB and GHGSat collaborating on groundbreaking technology to detect greenhouse gas emissions (CNW Group/ABB inc.)
QUEBEC — A sensor manufactured by ABB was deployed with the launch of satellite Hugo from GHGSat. The ABB supplied optical sensor can map methane emissions from space at a resolution that is 100 times higher than any other sensors.
Whilst previously only larger regions could be surveyed, for the first time the new greater granularity now allows the identification of the source of emissions. An additional nine units are currently under manufacture at ABB to be launched by the end of 2022 ready to be on-board across the first private satellite constellation dedicated to emission measurement.
Space offers the location to freely monitor emissions across jurisdictions and quantitatively report on improvements. The ABB sensors will provide insights that will enable governments and industries around the world to meet their emission reduction targets and reduce the negative impact on global warming.
“We selected ABB for its ability to deliver world-class instruments while meeting the challenges of a new space company like ours,” said Stephane Germain, CEO of GHGSat, in a prepared statement. “We strive to innovate for the needs of the future, and we’re excited to work with ABB to achieve that.”
GHGSat announced the constellation contract award with ABB in October 2020, with first deliveries in 2021. The unit launched by SpaceX was a single unit procured by GHGSat from ABB two years ago ahead of a selection for the constellation.
With its involvement in the Canadian SCISAT mission and the Japanese GOSAT series of satellites, ABB has been at the forefront of the field of greenhouse gas sensing from space for more than two decades. ABB optical equipment already in space cumulates more than 100 years of reliable operation. The SCISAT sensor tracks long-term subtle composition changes in the earth’s atmosphere down to parts per trillion of more than 70 molecules and pollutants since 2003. Weather agencies across the world base their predictions on ABB equipment flying onboard the US National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather satellites (NPP and JPSS).