Errors and uncertainties in a gridded carbon dioxide emissions inventory

被引:0
|
作者
Tomohiro Oda
Rostyslav Bun
Vitaliy Kinakh
Petro Topylko
Mariia Halushchak
Gregg Marland
Thomas Lauvaux
Matthias Jonas
Shamil Maksyutov
Zbigniew Nahorski
Myroslava Lesiv
Olha Danylo
Joanna Horabik-Pyzel
机构
[1] NASA Goddard Space Flight Center,Global Modeling and Assimilation Office
[2] Universities Space Research Association,Goddard Earth Sciences Technology and Research
[3] Lviv Polytechnic National University,Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences
[4] WSB University,Center for Global Environmental Research
[5] International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis,undefined
[6] Appalachian State University,undefined
[7] Laboratoire des sciences du climat et de l’environnement,undefined
[8] National Institute for Environmental Studies,undefined
[9] Systems Research Institute of Polish Academy of Sciences,undefined
[10] Warsaw School of Information Technology,undefined
关键词
Greenhouse gas emission; Emission inventory; Carbon dioxide; Carbon cycle; Uncertainty analysis; Climate mitigation; Remote sensing; Monitoring; Reporting and verification; Paris Agreement;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Emission inventories (EIs) are the fundamental tool to monitor compliance with greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and emission reduction commitments. Inventory accounting guidelines provide the best practices to help EI compilers across different countries and regions make comparable, national emission estimates regardless of differences in data availability. However, there are a variety of sources of error and uncertainty that originate beyond what the inventory guidelines can define. Spatially explicit EIs, which are a key product for atmospheric modeling applications, are often developed for research purposes and there are no specific guidelines to achieve spatial emission estimates. The errors and uncertainties associated with the spatial estimates are unique to the approaches employed and are often difficult to assess. This study compares the global, high-resolution (1 km), fossil fuel, carbon dioxide (CO2), gridded EI Open-source Data Inventory for Anthropogenic CO2 (ODIAC) with the multi-resolution, spatially explicit bottom-up EI geoinformation technologies, spatio-temporal approaches, and full carbon account for improving the accuracy of GHG inventories (GESAPU) over the domain of Poland. By taking full advantage of the data granularity that bottom-up EI offers, this study characterized the potential biases in spatial disaggregation by emission sector (point and non-point emissions) across different scales (national, subnational/regional, and urban policy-relevant scales) and identified the root causes. While two EIs are in agreement in total and sectoral emissions (2.2% for the total emissions), the emission spatial patterns showed large differences (10~100% relative differences at 1 km) especially at the urban-rural transitioning areas (90–100%). We however found that the agreement of emissions over urban areas is surprisingly good compared with the estimates previously reported for US cities. This paper also discusses the use of spatially explicit EIs for climate mitigation applications beyond the common use in atmospheric modeling. We conclude with a discussion of current and future challenges of EIs in support of successful implementation of GHG emission monitoring and mitigation activity under the Paris Climate Agreement from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) 21st Conference of the Parties (COP21). We highlight the importance of capacity building for EI development and coordinated research efforts of EI, atmospheric observations, and modeling to overcome the challenges.
引用
收藏
页码:1007 / 1050
页数:43
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Modeling carbon dioxide emissions reduction
    Matviychuk, Andriy
    Zhytkevych, Olena
    Osadcha, Natalia
    [J]. ENERGY REPORTS, 2024, 12 : 1876 - 1887
  • [42] Carbon dioxide emissions and global GDP
    Tucker, M
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 1995, 15 (03) : 215 - 223
  • [43] Carbon dioxide emissions and carbonation sensors
    Demirbas, A.
    [J]. ENERGY SOURCES PART A-RECOVERY UTILIZATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS, 2008, 30 (01) : 70 - 78
  • [44] Carbon dioxide emissions allocation: A review
    Zhou, P.
    Wang, M.
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2016, 125 : 47 - 59
  • [45] The world distribution of carbon dioxide emissions
    Ezcurra, Roberto
    [J]. APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2007, 14 (05) : 349 - 352
  • [46] REDUCTION OF AUTOMOBILE CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS
    Elalem, Abdelati
    EL-Bourawi, M. S.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MATERIAL FORMING, 2010, 3 : 663 - 666
  • [47] Club Convergence in Carbon Dioxide Emissions
    Panopoulou, Ekaterini
    Pantelidis, Theologos
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS, 2009, 44 (01): : 47 - 70
  • [48] The effect of ESCOs on carbon dioxide emissions
    Fang, WenShwo
    Miller, Stephen M.
    [J]. APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2013, 45 (34) : 4796 - 4804
  • [49] Carbon dioxide emissions of Antarctic tourism
    Farreny, Ramon
    Oliver-Sola, Jordi
    Lamers, Machiel
    Amelung, Bas
    Gabarrell, Xavier
    Rieradevall, Joan
    Boada, Marti
    Benayas, Javier
    [J]. ANTARCTIC SCIENCE, 2011, 23 (06) : 556 - 566
  • [50] New map of carbon dioxide emissions
    不详
    [J]. BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2008, 89 (06) : 787 - 787