Estimation of observation errors for large-scale atmospheric inversion of CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion

被引:15
|
作者
Wang, Yilong [1 ]
Broquet, Gregoire [1 ]
Ciais, Philippe [1 ]
Chevallier, Frederic [1 ]
Vogel, Felix [1 ]
Kadygrov, Nikolay [1 ]
Wu, Lin [1 ]
Yin, Yi [1 ]
Wang, Rong [1 ]
Tao, Shu [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Paris Saclay, Lab Sci Climat & Environm, CEA, CNRS,UVSQ, Gif Sur Yvette, France
[2] Peking Univ, Lab Earth Surface Proc, Coll Urban & Environm Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China
关键词
fossil fuel; radiocarbon; global atmospheric inversion; observation error; Europe; CARBON-DIOXIDE EMISSIONS; ANTHROPOGENIC CO2; PART; EUROPE; (CO2)-C-14; MODEL; UNCERTAINTIES; VERIFICATION; ENSEMBLE; FLUXES;
D O I
10.1080/16000889.2017.1325723
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
National annual inventories of CO2 emitted during fossil fuel consumption (FFCO2) bear 5-10% uncertainties for developed countries, and are likely higher at intra annual scales or for developing countries. Given the current international efforts of mitigating actions, there is a need for independent verifications of these inventories. Atmospheric inversion assimilating atmospheric gradients of CO2 and radiocarbon measurements could provide an independent way of monitoring FFCO2 emissions. A strategy would be to deploy such measurements over continental scale networks and to conduct continental to global scale atmospheric inversions targeting the national and one-month scale budgets of the emissions. Uncertainties in the high-resolution distribution of the emissions could limit the skill for such a large-scale inversion framework. This study assesses the impact of such uncertainties on the potential for monitoring the emissions at large scale. In practice, it is more specifically dedicated to the derivation, typical quantification and analysis of critical sources of errors that affect the inversion of FFCO2 emissions when solving for them at a relatively coarse resolution with a coarse grid transport model. These errors include those due to the mismatch between the resolution of the transport model and the spatial variability of the actual fluxes and concentrations (i.e. the representation errors) and those due to the uncertainties in the spatial and temporal distribution of emissions at the transport model resolution when solving for the emissions at large scale (i.e. the aggregation errors). We show that the aggregation errors characterize the impact of the corresponding uncertainties on the potential for monitoring the emissions at large scale, even if solving for them at the transport model resolution. We propose a practical method to quantify these sources of errors, and compare them with the precision of FFCO2 measurements (i.e. the measurement errors) and the errors in the modelling of atmospheric transport (i.e. the transport errors). The results show that both the representation and measurement errors can be much larger than the aggregation errors. The magnitude of representation and aggregation errors is sensitive to sampling heights and temporal sampling integration time. The combination of these errors can reach up to about 50% of the typical signals, i.e. the atmospheric large-scale mean afternoon FFCO2 gradients between sites being assimilated by the inversion system. These errors have large temporal auto-correlation scales, but short spatial correlation scales. This indicates the need for accounting for these temporal auto-correlations in the atmospheric inversions and the need for dense networks to limit the impact of these errors on the inversion of FFCO2 emissions at large scale. More generally, comparisons of the representation and aggregation errors to the errors in simulated FFCO2 gradients due to uncertainties in current inventories suggest that the potential of inversions using global coarse-resolution models (with typical horizontal resolution of a couple of degrees) to retrieve FFCO2 emissions at sub-continental scale could be limited, and that meso-scale models with smaller representation errors would effectively increase the potential of inversions to constrain FFCO2 emission estimates.
引用
收藏
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Characterizing uncertainties in atmospheric inversions of fossil fuel CO2 emissions in California
    Brophy, Kieran
    Graven, Heather
    Manning, Alistair J.
    White, Emily
    Arnold, Tim
    Fischer, Marc L.
    Jeong, Seongeun
    Cui, Xinguang
    Rigby, Matthew
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2019, 19 (05) : 2991 - 3006
  • [12] Potential of European 14CO2 observation network to estimate the fossil fuel CO2 emissions via atmospheric inversions
    Wang, Yilong
    Broquet, Gregoire
    Ciais, Philippe
    Chevallier, Frederic
    Vogel, Felix
    Wu, Lin
    Yin, Yi
    Wang, Rong
    Tao, Shu
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2018, 18 (06) : 4229 - 4250
  • [13] Reference forecasts for CO2 emissions from fossil-fuel combustion and cement production in Portugal
    Belbute, Jose M.
    Pereira, Alfredo M.
    ENERGY POLICY, 2020, 144
  • [14] Assessing fossil fuel CO2 emissions in California using atmospheric observations and models
    Graven, H.
    Fischer, M. L.
    Lueker, T.
    Jeong, S.
    Guilderson, T. P.
    Keeling, R. F.
    Bambha, R.
    Brophy, K.
    Callahan, W.
    Cui, X.
    Frankenberg, C.
    Gurney, K. R.
    LaFranchi, B. W.
    Lehman, S. J.
    Michelsen, H.
    Miller, J. B.
    Newman, S.
    Paplawsky, W.
    Parazoo, N. C.
    Sloop, C.
    Walker, S. J.
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2018, 13 (06):
  • [15] Can the envisaged reductions of fossil fuel CO2 emissions be detected by atmospheric observations?
    Ingeborg Levin
    Christian Rödenbeck
    Naturwissenschaften, 2008, 95 : 203 - 208
  • [16] Can the envisaged reductions of fossil fuel CO2 emissions be detected by atmospheric observations?
    Levin, Ingeborg
    Roedenbeck, Christian
    NATURWISSENSCHAFTEN, 2008, 95 (03) : 203 - 208
  • [17] The first 1-year-long estimate of the Paris region fossil fuel CO2 emissions based on atmospheric inversion
    Staufer, Johannes
    Broquet, Gregoire
    Breon, Francois-Marie
    Puygrenier, Vincent
    Chevallier, Frederic
    Xueref-Remy, Irene
    Dieudonne, Elsa
    Lopez, Morgan
    Schmidt, Martina
    Ramonet, Michel
    Perrussel, Olivier
    Lac, Christine
    Wu, Lin
    Ciais, Philippe
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2016, 16 (22) : 14703 - 14726
  • [18] Predictability of fossil fuel CO2 from air quality emissions
    Miyazaki, Kazuyuki
    Bowman, Kevin
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2023, 14 (01)
  • [19] Predictability of fossil fuel CO2 from air quality emissions
    Kazuyuki Miyazaki
    Kevin Bowman
    Nature Communications, 14
  • [20] FOSSIL-FUEL RESOURCES AND CO2 PRODUCTION FROM COMBUSTION
    PENNER, SS
    ENERGY, 1991, 16 (11-12) : 1417 - 1419