Using Space‐Based CO2 and NO2 Observations to Estimate Urban CO2 Emissions

Author:

Yang Emily G.1ORCID,Kort Eric A.1ORCID,Ott Lesley E.2,Oda Tomohiro345ORCID,Lin John C.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI USA

2. Global Modeling and Assimilation Office NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt MD USA

3. Earth from Space Institute Universities Space Research Association (USRA) Columbia MD USA

4. Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science University of Maryland College Park MD USA

5. Graduate School of Engineering Osaka University Osaka Japan

6. Department of Atmospheric Sciences University of Utah Salt Lake City UT USA

Abstract

AbstractAs the majority of fossil fuel carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions originate from cities, the use of novel techniques to leverage available satellite observations of CO2 and proxy species to constrain urban CO2 is of great importance. In this study, we seek to empirically determine relationships between satellite observations of CO2 and the proxy species nitrogen dioxide (NO2), applying these relationships to NO2 fields to generate NO2‐derived CO2 fields (NDCFs) from which CO2 emissions can be estimated. We first establish this method using simulations of CO2 and NO2 for the cities of Buenos Aires, Melbourne, and Mexico City, finding that the method is viable throughout the year. For the same three cities, we next calculate empirical relationships (slopes) between co‐located observations of NO2 from the Tropospheric Monitoring Instrument and Snapshot Area Mode observations of CO2 from Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐3. Applying varying combinations of slopes to generate NDCFs, we evaluate methodological uncertainties for each slope application method and use a simple mass balance method to estimate CO2 emissions from NDCFs. We demonstrate monthly urban CO2 emissions estimates that are comparable to emissions inventory estimates. We additionally prove the utility of our method by demonstrating how large uncertainties at a grid cell level (equivalent to ∼1–3 ppm) can be reduced substantially when aggregating emissions estimates from NDCFs generated from all NO2 swaths (about 1%–6%). Rather than rely on prior knowledge of emission ratios, our method circumvents such assumptions and provides a valuable observational constraint on urban CO2 emissions.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Atmospheric Science,Geophysics

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