Trends and Drivers of Terrestrial Sources and Sinks of Carbon Dioxide: An Overview of the TRENDY Project

Author:

Sitch Stephen1ORCID,O’Sullivan Michael1ORCID,Robertson Eddy2ORCID,Friedlingstein Pierre13,Albergel Clément4ORCID,Anthoni Peter5ORCID,Arneth Almut5,Arora Vivek K.6,Bastos Ana7ORCID,Bastrikov Vladislav8,Bellouin Nicolas9ORCID,Canadell Josep G.10ORCID,Chini Louise11ORCID,Ciais Philippe8ORCID,Falk Stefanie12,Harris Ian13ORCID,Hurtt George11ORCID,Ito Akihiko14ORCID,Jain Atul K.15ORCID,Jones Matthew W.16ORCID,Joos Fortunat17ORCID,Kato Etsushi18ORCID,Kennedy Daniel19,Klein Goldewijk Kees20,Kluzek Erik19ORCID,Knauer Jürgen2122ORCID,Lawrence Peter J.19ORCID,Lombardozzi Danica19ORCID,Melton Joe R.23ORCID,Nabel Julia E. M. S.7ORCID,Pan Naiqing24ORCID,Peylin Philippe8,Pongratz Julia1225,Poulter Benjamin26ORCID,Rosan Thais M.1ORCID,Sun Qing17ORCID,Tian Hanqin24,Walker Anthony P.27ORCID,Weber Ulrich7,Yuan Wenping28ORCID,Yue Xu29ORCID,Zaehle Sönke7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy University of Exeter Exeter UK

2. Met Office Hadley Centre Exeter UK

3. Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique/Institut Pierre‐Simon Laplace CNRS Ecole Normale Paris France

4. European Space Agency Climate Office ECSAT Didcot UK

5. Karlsruhe Institute of Technology Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research/Atmospheric Environmental Research Garmisch‐Partenkirchen Germany

6. Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis Environment and Climate Change Canada Victoria BC Canada

7. Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry Jena Germany

8. Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l’Environnement LSCE/IPSL CEA‐CNRS‐UVSQ Université Paris‐Saclay Gif‐sur‐Yvette France

9. Department of Meteorology University of Reading Reading UK

10. Global Carbon Project CSIRO Environment Canberra ACT Australia

11. Department of Geographical Sciences University of Maryland College Park MD USA

12. Ludwig‐Maximilians‐Universität München Munich Germany

13. National Centre for Atmospheric Science Climatic Research Unit School of Environmental Sciences University of East Anglia Norwich UK

14. Graduate School of Life and Agricultural Sciences University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

15. Department of Climate, Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences (CLiMAS) University of Illinois, Urbana‐Champaign Urbana IL USA

16. Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research School of Environmental Sciences University of East Anglia (UEA) Norwich UK

17. Climate and Environmental Physics Physics Institute and Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research University of Bern Bern Switzerland

18. Institute of Applied Energy Tokyo Japan

19. Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder CO USA

20. Faculty of Geosciences Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

21. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment Western Sydney University Penrith NSW Australia

22. CSIRO Environment Canberra ACT Australia

23. Climate Research Division Environment and Climate Change Canada Victoria BC Canada

24. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Center for Earth System Science and Global Sustainability Schiller Institute for Integrated Science and Society Boston College Chestnut Hill MA USA

25. Max Planck Institute for Meteorology Hamburg Germany

26. Biospheric Sciences Laboratory NASA GSFC Greenbelt MD USA

27. Environmental Sciences Division and Climate Change Science Institute Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge TN USA

28. Institute of Carbon Neutrality, Sino‐French Institute for Earth System Science College of Urban and Environmental Sciences Peking University Beijing China

29. School of Environmental Science and Engineering Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology (NUIST) Nanjing China

Abstract

AbstractThe terrestrial biosphere plays a major role in the global carbon cycle, and there is a recognized need for regularly updated estimates of land‐atmosphere exchange at regional and global scales. An international ensemble of Dynamic Global Vegetation Models (DGVMs), known as the “Trends and drivers of the regional scale terrestrial sources and sinks of carbon dioxide” (TRENDY) project, quantifies land biophysical exchange processes and biogeochemistry cycles in support of the annual Global Carbon Budget assessments and the REgional Carbon Cycle Assessment and Processes, phase 2 project. DGVMs use a common protocol and set of driving data sets. A set of factorial simulations allows attribution of spatio‐temporal changes in land surface processes to three primary global change drivers: changes in atmospheric CO2, climate change and variability, and Land Use and Land Cover Changes (LULCC). Here, we describe the TRENDY project, benchmark DGVM performance using remote‐sensing and other observational data, and present results for the contemporary period. Simulation results show a large global carbon sink in natural vegetation over 2012–2021, attributed to the CO2 fertilization effect (3.8 ± 0.8 PgC/yr) and climate (−0.58 ± 0.54 PgC/yr). Forests and semi‐arid ecosystems contribute approximately equally to the mean and trend in the natural land sink, and semi‐arid ecosystems continue to dominate interannual variability. The natural sink is offset by net emissions from LULCC (−1.6 ± 0.5 PgC/yr), with a net land sink of 1.7 ± 0.6 PgC/yr. Despite the largest gross fluxes being in the tropics, the largest net land‐atmosphere exchange is simulated in the extratropical regions.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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