The CO<sub>2</sub> integral emission by the megacity of St Petersburg as quantified from ground-based FTIR measurements combined with dispersion modelling
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Published:2021-07-20
Issue:14
Volume:21
Page:10939-10963
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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:
Ionov Dmitry V.ORCID, Makarova Maria V.ORCID, Hase Frank, Foka Stefani C.ORCID, Kostsov Vladimir S.ORCID, Alberti Carlos, Blumenstock ThomasORCID, Warneke Thorsten, Virolainen Yana A.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The anthropogenic impact is a major factor of climate
change, which is highest in industrial regions and modern megacities.
Megacities are a significant source of emissions of various substances into
the atmosphere, including CO2 which is the most important anthropogenic
greenhouse gas. In 2019 and 2020, the mobile experiment EMME (Emission
Monitoring Mobile Experiment) was carried out on the territory of St
Petersburg which is the second-largest industrial city in Russia with a
population of more than 5 million people. In 2020, several measurement data
sets were obtained during the lockdown period caused by the COVID-19
(COronaVIrus Disease of 2019) pandemic. One of the goals of EMME was to
evaluate the CO2 emission from the St Petersburg agglomeration.
Previously, the CO2 area flux has been obtained from the data of the
EMME-2019 experiment using the mass balance approach. The value of the
CO2 area flux for St Petersburg has been estimated as being 89±28 kt km−2 yr−1, which is 3 times higher than the
corresponding value reported in the official municipal inventory. The
present study is focused on the derivation of the integral CO2 emission from St Petersburg by coupling the results of the EMME observational campaigns of 2019 and 2020 and the HYSPLIT (HYbrid Single-Particle Lagrangian Integrated Trajectories) model. The ODIAC (Open-Data Inventory for Anthropogenic CO2) database is used as the source of the a priori information on the CO2 emissions for the territory of St Petersburg. The most important finding of the present study, based on the analysis of two observational campaigns, is a significantly higher CO2
emission from the megacity of St Petersburg compared to the data of
municipal inventory, i.e. ∼75800±5400 kt yr−1 for
2019 and ∼68400±7100 kt yr−1 for 2020 versus
∼30 000 kt yr−1 reported by official inventory. The
comparison of the CO2 emissions obtained during the COVID-19
lockdown period in 2020 to the results obtained during the same period of
2019 demonstrated the decrease in emissions of 10 % or
7400 kt yr−1.
Funder
Russian Foundation for Basic Research Horizon 2020
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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