19 research outputs found
Emissions and topographic effects on column CO_2 (XCO_2) variations, with a focus on the Southern California Megacity
Within the California South Coast Air Basin (SoCAB), X_(CO)_2 varies significantly due to atmospheric dynamics and the nonuniform distribution of sources. X_(CO)_2 measurements within the basin have seasonal variation compared to the âbackgroundâ due primarily to dynamics, or the origins of air masses coming into the basin. We observe basin-background differences that are in close agreement for three observing systems: Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON) 2.3 ± 1.2 ppm, Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) 2.4 ± 1.5 ppm, and Greenhouse gases Observing Satellite 2.4 ± 1.6 ppm (errors are 1Ï). We further observe persistent significant differences (âŒ0.9 ppm) in X_(CO)_2 between two TCCON sites located only 9 km apart within the SoCAB. We estimate that 20% (±1Ï confidence interval (CI): 0%, 58%) of the variance is explained by a difference in elevation using a full physics and emissions model and 36% (±1Ï CI: 10%, 101%) using a simple, fixed mixed layer model. This effect arises in the presence of a sharp gradient in any species (here we focus on CO_2) between the mixed layer (ML) and free troposphere. Column differences between nearby locations arise when the change in elevation is greater than the change in ML height. This affects the fraction of atmosphere that is in the ML above each site. We show that such topographic effects produce significant variation in X_(CO)_2 across the SoCAB as well
Emissions and topographic effects on column CO2 (XCO2) variations, with a focus on the Southern California Megacity
Within the California South Coast Air Basin (SoCAB), XCO2 varies significantly due to atmospheric dynamics and the nonuniform distribution of sources. XCO2 measurements within the basin have seasonal variation compared to the âbackgroundâ due primarily to dynamics, or the origins of air masses coming into the basin. We observe basinâbackground differences that are in close agreement for three observing systems: Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON) 2.3 ± 1.2 ppm, Orbiting Carbon Observatoryâ2 (OCOâ2) 2.4 ± 1.5 ppm, and Greenhouse gases Observing Satellite 2.4 ± 1.6 ppm (errors are 1Ï). We further observe persistent significant differences (âŒ0.9 ppm) in XCO2 between two TCCON sites located only 9 km apart within the SoCAB. We estimate that 20% (±1Ï confidence interval (CI): 0%, 58%) of the variance is explained by a difference in elevation using a full physics and emissions model and 36% (±1Ï CI: 10%, 101%) using a simple, fixed mixed layer model. This effect arises in the presence of a sharp gradient in any species (here we focus on CO2) between the mixed layer (ML) and free troposphere. Column differences between nearby locations arise when the change in elevation is greater than the change in ML height. This affects the fraction of atmosphere that is in the ML above each site. We show that such topographic effects produce significant variation in XCO2 across the SoCAB as well.Plain Language SummaryCities persistently have elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) levels as compared to surrounding regions. Within a city CO2 levels can also vary significantly at different locations for reasons such as more CO2 being emitted in some parts than others. Elevated column CO2 levels in the South Coast Air Basin (SoCAB) are in agreement for three observation systems (two satellite and one groundâbased) systems and vary with regional wind patterns throughout the year. In Pasadena, California, within the SoCAB, a significant fraction (about 25%) of variation in the columnâaveraged CO2 can be explained by differences in surface altitude. This is important to understand so that all variations in column CO2 within an urban region are not mistakenly interpreted as being from CO2 surface fluxes.Key PointsIn the SoCAB, 20â36% of spatial variance in XCO2 is explained by topography on scales âČ10 kmIn Pasadena, XCO2 is enhanced by 2.3 ± 1.2 (1Ï) ppm above background levels, at 1300 (UTC 8) with seasonal variationThe SoCAB XCO2 enhancement is in agreement for 3 different observation sets (TCCON, GOSAT, and OCOâ2)Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/137737/1/jgrd53887.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/137737/2/jgrd53887_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/137737/3/jgrd53887-sup-0001-supinfo.pd
Quantification of urban atmospheric boundary layer greenhouse gas dry mole fraction enhancements in the dormant season: Results from the Indianapolis Flux Experiment (INFLUX)
We assess the detectability of city emissions via a tower-based greenhouse gas (GHG) network, as part of the Indianapolis Flux (INFLUX) experiment. By examining afternoon-averaged results from a network of carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and carbon monoxide (CO) mole fraction measurements in Indianapolis, Indiana for 2011â2013, we quantify spatial and temporal patterns in urban atmospheric GHG dry mole fractions. The platform for these measurements is twelve communications towers spread across the metropolitan region, ranging in height from 39 to 136 m above ground level, and instrumented with cavity ring-down spectrometers. Nine of the sites were deployed as of January 2013 and data from these sites are the focus of this paper. A background site, chosen such that it is on the predominantly upwind side of the city, is utilized to quantify enhancements caused by urban emissions. Afternoon averaged mole fractions are studied because this is the time of day during which the height of the boundary layer is most steady in time and the area that influences the tower measurements is likely to be largest. Additionally, atmospheric transport models have better performance in simulating the daytime convective boundary layer compared to the nighttime boundary layer. Averaged from January through April of 2013, the mean urban dormant-season enhancements range from 0.3 ppm CO2 at the site 24 km typically downwind of the edge of the city (Site 09) to 1.4 ppm at the site at the downwind edge of the city (Site 02) to 2.9 ppm at the downtown site (Site 03). When the wind is aligned such that the sites are downwind of the urban area, the enhancements are increased, to 1.6 ppm at Site 09, and 3.3 ppm at Site 02. Differences in sampling height affect the reported urban enhancement by up to 50%, but the overall spatial pattern remains similar. The time interval over which the afternoon data are averaged alters the calculated urban enhancement by an average of 0.4 ppm. The CO2 observations are compared to CO2 mole fractions simulated using a mesoscale atmospheric model and an emissions inventory for Indianapolis. The observed and modeled CO2 enhancements are highly correlated (r2 = 0.94), but the modeled enhancements prior to inversion average 53% of those measured at the towers. Following the inversion, the enhancements follow the observations closely, as expected. The CH4 urban enhancement ranges from 5 ppb at the site 10 km predominantly downwind of the city (Site 13) to 21 ppb at the site near the landfill (Site 10), and for CO ranges from 6 ppb at the site 24 km downwind of the edge of the city (Site 09) to 29 ppb at the downtown site (Site 03). Overall, these observations show that a dense network of urban GHG measurements yield a detectable urban signal, well-suited as input to an urban inversion system given appropriate attention to sampling time, sampling altitude and quantification of background conditions
Los Angeles megacity: a high-resolution landâatmosphere modelling system for urban CO_2 emissions
Megacities are major sources of anthropogenic fossil fuel CO_2 (FFCO_2) emissions. The spatial extents of these large urban systems cover areas of 10000 km^2 or more with complex topography and changing landscapes. We present a high-resolution landâatmosphere modelling system for urban CO_2 emissions over the Los Angeles (LA) megacity area. The Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF)-Chem model was coupled to a very high-resolution FFCO_2 emission product, Hestia-LA, to simulate atmospheric CO_2 concentrations across the LA megacity at spatial resolutions as fine as ââŒâ1 km. We evaluated multiple WRF configurations, selecting one that minimized errors in wind speed, wind direction, and boundary layer height as evaluated by its performance against meteorological data collected during the CalNex-LA campaign (MayâJune 2010). Our results show no significant difference between moderate-resolution (4 km) and high-resolution (1.3 km) simulations when evaluated against surface meteorological data, but the high-resolution configurations better resolved planetary boundary layer heights and vertical gradients in the horizontal mean winds. We coupled our WRF configuration with the Vulcan 2.2 (10 km resolution) and Hestia-LA (1.3 km resolution) fossil fuel CO_2 emission products to evaluate the impact of the spatial resolution of the CO_2 emission products and the meteorological transport model on the representation of spatiotemporal variability in simulated atmospheric CO_2 concentrations. We find that high spatial resolution in the fossil fuel CO_2 emissions is more important than in the atmospheric model to capture CO_2 concentration variability across the LA megacity. Finally, we present a novel approach that employs simultaneous correlations of the simulated atmospheric CO_2 fields to qualitatively evaluate the greenhouse gas measurement network over the LA megacity. Spatial correlations in the atmospheric CO_2 fields reflect the coverage of individual measurement sites when a statistically significant number of sites observe emissions from a specific source or location. We conclude that elevated atmospheric CO_2 concentrations over the LA megacity are composed of multiple fine-scale plumes rather than a single homogenous urban dome. Furthermore, we conclude that FFCO_2 emissions monitoring in the LA megacity requires FFCO_2 emissions modelling with ââŒâ1 km resolution because coarser-resolution emissions modelling tends to overestimate the observational constraints on the emissions estimates
Comparison of Global Downscaled Versus BottomâUp Fossil Fuel CO2 Emissions at the Urban Scale in Four U.S. Urban Areas
Spatiotemporally resolved urban fossil fuel CO2 (FFCO2) emissions are critical to urban carbon cycle research and urban climate policy. Two general scientific approaches have been taken to estimate spatiotemporally explicit urban FFCO2 fluxes, referred to here as âdownscalingâ and âbottomâup.â Bottomâup approaches can specifically characterize the CO2âemitting infrastructure in cities but are laborâintensive to build and currently available in few U.S. cities. Downscaling approaches, often available globally, require proxy information to allocate or distribute emissions resulting in additional uncertainty. We present a comparison of a downscaled FFCO2 emission data product (Openâsource Data Inventory for Anthropogenic CO2 (ODIAC)) to a bottomâup estimate (Hestia) in four U.S. urban areas in an effort to better isolate and understand differences between the approaches. We find wholeâcity differences ranging from â1.5% (Los Angeles Basin) to +20.8% (Salt Lake City). At the 1 km Ă 1 km spatial scale, comparisons reveal a lowâemission limit in ODIAC driven by saturation of the nighttime light spatial proxy. At this resolution, the median difference between the two approaches ranged from 47 to 84% depending upon city with correlations ranging from 0.34 to 0.68. The largest discrepancies were found for large point sources and the onâroad sector, suggesting that downscaled FFCO2 data products could be improved by incorporating independent large pointâsource estimates and estimating onâroad sources with a relevant spatial surrogate. Progressively coarsening the spatial resolution improves agreement but greater than approximately 25 km2, there were diminishing returns to agreement suggesting a practical resolution when using downscaled approaches.Plain Language SummaryComparison of greenhouse gas emission approaches using globally available data in specific cities shows large differences when compared to greenhouse gas emission approaches constructed from local data sources. Differences are largest at the smaller scales compared to the whole city. This suggests a limit on the use of global greenhouse gas inventories when applied to urban areas.Key PointsThe difference between the global downscaled and bottomâup estimates for the wholeâcity domain exceeds 10% in three of the four citiesAverage grid cell FFCO2 differences at 1âkm2 range from 47% (Salt Lake City) to 84% (LA Basin) with spatial correlations of 0.34 to 0.68Average grid cell FFCO2 differences show diminishing agreement improvements when resolution is coarsened beyond 25 km2Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/148411/1/jgrd55209_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/148411/2/jgrd55209.pd
Joint inverse estimation of fossil fuel and biogenic CO2 fluxes in an urban environment: An observing system simulation experiment to assess the impact of multiple uncertainties
The Indianapolis Flux Experiment aims to utilize a variety of atmospheric measurements and a high-resolution inversion system to estimate the temporal and spatial variation of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions from an urban environment. We present a Bayesian inversion system solving for fossil fuel and biogenic CO2 fluxes over the city of Indianapolis, IN. Both components were described at 1 km resolution to represent point sources and fine-scale structures such as highways in the a priori fluxes. With a series of Observing System Simulation Experiments, we evaluate the sensitivity of inverse flux estimates to various measurement deployment strategies and errors. We also test the impacts of flux error structures, biogenic CO2 fluxes and atmospheric transport errors on estimating fossil fuel CO2 emissions and their uncertainties. The results indicate that high-accuracy and high-precision measurements produce significant improvement in fossil fuel CO2 flux estimates. Systematic measurement errors of 1 ppm produce significantly biased inverse solutions, degrading the accuracy of retrieved emissions by about 1 'ÎŒ'mol mâ2 sâ1 compared to the spatially averaged anthropogenic CO2 emissions of 5 'ÎŒ'mol mâ2 sâ1. The presence of biogenic CO2 fluxes (similar magnitude to the anthropogenic fluxes) limits our ability to correct for random and systematic emission errors. However, assimilating continuous fossil fuel CO2 measurements with 1 ppm random error in addition to total CO2 measurements can partially compensate for the interference from biogenic CO2 fluxes. Moreover, systematic and random flux errors can be further reduced by reducing model-data mismatch errors caused by atmospheric transport uncertainty. Finally, the precision of the inverse flux estimate is highly sensitive to the correlation length scale in the prior emission errors. This work suggests that improved fossil fuel CO2 measurement technology, and better understanding of both prior flux and atmospheric transport errors are essential to improve the accuracy and precision of high-resolution urban CO2 flux estimates
Toward consistency between trends in bottom-up CO<sub>2</sub> emissions and top-down atmospheric measurements in the Los Angeles megacity
Large urban emissions of greenhouse gases result in large atmospheric
enhancements relative to background that are easily measured. Using CO<sub>2</sub>
mole fractions and Δ<sup>14</sup>C and <i>ÎŽ</i><sup>13</sup>C values of
CO<sub>2</sub> in the Los Angeles megacity observed in inland Pasadena (2006–2013)
and coastal Palos Verdes peninsula (autumn 2009–2013), we have determined
time series for CO<sub>2</sub> contributions from fossil fuel combustion
(C<sub>ff</sub>) for both sites and broken those down into contributions from
petroleum and/or gasoline and natural gas burning for Pasadena. We find a 10 %
reduction in Pasadena C<sub>ff</sub> during the Great Recession of 2008–2010,
which is consistent with the bottom-up inventory determined by the
California Air Resources Board. The isotopic variations and total
atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> from our observations are used to infer seasonality of
natural gas and petroleum combustion. The trend of CO<sub>2</sub> contributions to
the atmosphere from natural gas combustion is out of phase with the seasonal
cycle of total natural gas combustion seasonal patterns in bottom-up
inventories but is consistent with the seasonality of natural gas usage by
the area's electricity generating power plants. For petroleum, the inferred
seasonality of CO<sub>2</sub> contributions from burning petroleum is delayed by
several months relative to usage indicated by statewide gasoline taxes.
Using the high-resolution Hestia-LA data product to compare C<sub>ff</sub> from
parts of the basin sampled by winds at different times of year, we find that
variations in observed fossil fuel CO<sub>2</sub> reflect seasonal variations in
wind direction. The seasonality of the local CO<sub>2</sub> excess from fossil
fuel combustion along the coast, on Palos Verdes peninsula, is higher in
autumn and winter than spring and summer, almost completely out of phase with
that from Pasadena, also because of the annual variations of winds in the
region. Variations in fossil fuel CO<sub>2</sub> signals are consistent with
sampling the bottom-up Hestia-LA fossil CO<sub>2</sub> emissions product for
sub-city source regions in the LA megacity domain when wind directions are
considered