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Can that gas be remoooved? The quest for climate-friendly cows.

On the campus of Cornell University, within an intricately monitored and carefully sealed chamber, there is a cow. 

Scientists record what this cow eats and drinks. Every breath she takes is also measured to its molecular level. Most important to this state-of-the-art study is the methane she exhales. 

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Methane is one of the world’s most powerful greenhouse gases — and cows are a significant source of methane. Researchers are exploring ways to manage this natural phenomenon.

Methane is a naturally occurring gas that comes from a variety of sources, including cow burps. It is also one of the world’s most potent greenhouse gases – far more heat-trapping than carbon dioxide. Although it lasts for a much shorter time in the atmosphere than carbon dioxide, methane has been getting increasing attention by those looking to fight climate change.

“There is growing awareness … that reducing methane emissions is the fastest way to reduce warming,” says Dan Blaustein-Rejto, director of food and agriculture at the nonprofit Breakthrough Institute. 

Researchers estimate that cows are responsible for around 30% of U.S. methane emissions. Now, people are trying to find ways to make cow burps — the body function that produces the most methane — less gassy. 

On the campus of Cornell University, within an intricately monitored and carefully sealed chamber, there is a cow. 

Scientists carefully record what this cow eats and what she drinks. They open the chamber only once a day, so as to limit disturbances to her environment. Every breath she takes – or more crucially, exhales – is also measured to its molecular level. There is hydrogen. There is carbon, recorded down to its isotopic composition. There is oxygen.  

And, most important to this state-of-the-art study, there is methane.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Methane is one of the world’s most powerful greenhouse gases — and cows are a significant source of methane. Researchers are exploring ways to manage this natural phenomenon.

Methane is a naturally occurring gas that comes from a variety of biological and industrial sources, from oil- and gas-well leaks to decomposing garbage to, well, cow burps. It is also one of the world’s most potent greenhouse gases – far more heat-trapping than carbon dioxide. And although it lasts for a much shorter time in the atmosphere than carbon dioxide, methane has been getting increasing attention by those looking to fight climate change.

“There is growing awareness amongst environmental advocates, policymakers, that reducing methane emissions is the fastest way to reduce warming,” says Dan Blaustein-Rejto, director of food and agriculture at the nonprofit Breakthrough Institute.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

Dairy cows eat in Cornell’s teaching barn, which holds 600 lactating cows, June 7, 2024, in Ithaca, New York.

And that attention has started to focus on cows. Cows such as Number 2945, who is standing in the middle of one of Cornell’s new respiration chambers. 

Although exact percentages are difficult to determine, researchers estimate that cows are responsible for around 30% of U.S. methane emissions. This is largely because cattle, like goats or sheep, are ruminants: animals with four-chambered stomachs that ferment grass and other vegetation into consumable food. And a natural by-product of rumination is methane.

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