New estimate of particulate emissions from Indonesian peat fires in 2015
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Published:2019-09-03
Issue:17
Volume:19
Page:11105-11121
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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:
Kiely Laura, Spracklen Dominick V., Wiedinmyer Christine, Conibear LukeORCID, Reddington Carly L.ORCID, Archer-Nicholls ScottORCID, Lowe DouglasORCID, Arnold Stephen R., Knote ChristophORCID, Khan Md FirozORCID, Latif Mohd Talib, Kuwata Mikinori, Budisulistiorini Sri HapsariORCID, Syaufina Lailan
Abstract
Abstract. Indonesia contains large areas of peatland that have been drained
and cleared of natural vegetation, making them susceptible to burning. Peat
fires emit considerable amounts of carbon dioxide, particulate matter (PM)
and other trace gases, contributing to climate change and causing regional
air pollution. However, emissions from peat fires are uncertain, due to
uncertainties in emission factors and fuel consumption. We used the Weather
Research and Forecasting model with chemistry and measurements of PM
concentrations to constrain PM emissions from Indonesian fires during 2015,
one of the largest fire seasons in recent decades. We estimate primary
PM2.5 (particles with diameters less than 2.5 µm) emissions from
fires across Sumatra and Borneo during September–October 2015 were 7.33 Tg, a factor 3.5 greater than those in the Fire Inventory from NCAR (FINNv1.5),
which does not include peat burning. We estimate similar dry fuel
consumption and CO2 emissions to those in the Global Fire Emissions
Database (GFED4s, including small fires) but PM2.5
emissions that are a factor of 1.8 greater, due to updated PM2.5 emission factors for Indonesian peat.
Fires were responsible for an additional 3.12 Tg of secondary organic
aerosol formation. Through comparing simulated and measured PM
concentrations, our work provides independent support of these updated
emission factors. We estimate peat burning contributed 71 % of total
primary PM2.5 emissions from fires in Indonesia during September–October
2015. We show that using satellite-retrieved soil moisture to modify the
assumed depth of peat burn improves the simulation of PM, increasing the
correlation between simulated and observed PM from 0.48 to 0.56. Overall,
our work suggests that peat fires in Indonesia produce substantially greater
PM emissions than estimated in current emission inventories, with
implications for the predicted air quality impacts of peat burning.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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