Quantifying fossil fuel methane emissions using observations of atmospheric ethane and an uncertain emission ratio
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Published:2022-03-25
Issue:6
Volume:22
Page:3911-3929
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Ramsden Alice E.ORCID, Ganesan Anita L.ORCID, Western Luke M.ORCID, Rigby MatthewORCID, Manning Alistair J.ORCID, Foulds AmyORCID, France James L.ORCID, Barker PatrickORCID, Levy PeterORCID, Say DanielORCID, Wisher Adam, Arnold Tim, Rennick ChrisORCID, Stanley Kieran M.ORCID, Young DickonORCID, O'Doherty SimonORCID
Abstract
Abstract. We present a method for estimating fossil fuel methane emissions using observations of methane and ethane, accounting for uncertainty in their
emission ratio. The ethane:methane emission ratio is incorporated as a spatially and temporally variable parameter in a Bayesian
model, with its own prior distribution and uncertainty. We find that using an emission ratio distribution mitigates bias from using a fixed,
potentially incorrect emission ratio and that uncertainty in this ratio is propagated into posterior estimates of emissions. A synthetic data test
is used to show the impact of assuming an incorrect ethane:methane emission ratio and demonstrate how our variable parameter model
can better quantify overall uncertainty. We also use this method to estimate UK methane emissions from high-frequency observations of methane and
ethane from the UK Deriving Emissions linked to Climate Change (DECC) network. Using the joint methane–ethane inverse model, we estimate annual
mean UK methane emissions of approximately 0.27 (95 % uncertainty interval 0.26–0.29) Tg yr−1 from fossil fuel sources and 2.06 (1.99–2.15) Tg yr−1 from non-fossil fuel sources, during the period 2015–2019. Uncertainties in UK fossil fuel emissions estimates are
reduced on average by 15 % and up to 35 % when incorporating ethane into the inverse model, in comparison to results from the methane-only
inversion.
Funder
UK Research and Innovation
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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