Observing carbon dioxide emissions over China's cities and industrial areas with the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2
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Published:2020-07-21
Issue:14
Volume:20
Page:8501-8510
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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:
Zheng BoORCID, Chevallier FrédéricORCID, Ciais Philippe, Broquet Grégoire, Wang YilongORCID, Lian Jinghui, Zhao Yuanhong
Abstract
Abstract. In order to track progress towards the global climate
targets, the parties that signed the Paris Climate Agreement will regularly
report their anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions based on
energy statistics and CO2 emission factors. Independent evaluation of
this self-reporting system is a fast-growing research topic. Here, we study
the value of satellite observations of the column CO2 concentrations to
estimate CO2 anthropogenic emissions with 5 years of the Orbiting
Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) retrievals over and around China. With the
detailed information of emission source locations and the local wind, we
successfully observe CO2 plumes from 46 cities and industrial regions
over China and quantify their CO2 emissions from the OCO-2
observations, which add up to a total of 1.3 Gt CO2 yr−1 that
accounts for approximately 13 % of mainland China's annual emissions. The
number of cities whose emissions are constrained by OCO-2 here is 3 to
10 times larger than in previous studies that only focused on large cities and
power plants in different locations around the world. Our satellite-based
emission estimates are broadly consistent with the independent values from
China's detailed emission inventory MEIC but are more different from those
of two widely used global gridded emission datasets (i.e., EDGAR and ODIAC),
especially for the emission estimates for the individual cities. These
results demonstrate some skill in the satellite-based emission
quantification for isolated source clusters with the OCO-2, despite the
sparse sampling of this instrument not designed for this purpose. This skill
can be improved by future satellite missions that will have a denser spatial
sampling of surface emitting areas, which will come soon in the early 2020s.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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