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An attempt to quantify fossil fuel CO 2 over Europe Ute Karstens 1, Ingeborg Levin 2 1 Max-Planck-Institut für Biogeochemie, Jena 2 Institut für Umweltphysik, Universität Heidelberg
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How large is the contribution from fossil fuels to the amount of CO 2 in the atmosphere? … from a modeller’s perspective
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February CO 2 Fluxes Biome-BGC NEE (Churkina et al., 2003) 10 -9 kg C m -2 s -1 01020304050-10 February 2002annual mean 2000 Fossil fuel CO 2 (EDGAR V3.2 FT, Olivier et al., 2005)
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Heidelberg: February 2002 (REgional MOdel)
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Heidelberg: June 2002 (REgional MOdel)
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Schauinsland: February 2002 (REgional MOdel)
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Fossil fuel experiment Objective: Assess the impact of new « hourly estimates » of fossil fuel emissions over Europe at continental sites using different transport models Inventories: TransCom 3 EDGAR ft 2000 yearly EDGAR ft 2000 hourly IER 2000 hourly Models: LMDz TM5 TM3 DEHM REMO
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Fossil fuel experiment FebMarJanAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec 2002
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How to measure fossil fuel CO 2 in the atmosphere? —› Radiocarbon ( 14 C) in atmospheric CO 2 … … because fossil fuel CO 2 contains no 14 C and dilutes atmospheric 14 CO 2
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14 CO 2 monitoring sites in (Carbo)Europe Paris Lutjewad Heidelberg Schauinsland Jungfraujoch Krakow Kasprowy Mace Head REMO mean european fossil fuel CO 2 in January 2002 at 130m [ppm]
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Measured CO 2 (foss) mixing ratio Data provided by R. Neubert (Lutjewad) and K. Rozanski (Krakow) 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 20 15 10 5 0 543210543210 CO 2 fossil fuel [ppm] Comparison with REMO 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 20 15 10 5 0 543210543210 CO 2 fossil fuel [ppm]
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Measured CO 2 (foss) mixing ratio Geels et al., 2005, CO 2 model comparison Comparison with models CO 2 fossil fuel [ppm] 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 20 15 10 5 0 -5 JULY – 1998 DECEMBER – 1998 mhd cbw sch jfjhei hun pal tvr prs mhd cbw sch jfjhei hun pal tvr prs TM3 LMDZ HANK DEHM REMO OBS
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… but the network of 14 C measurements is sparse: 8 - 10 stations across Europe … and the temporal resolution is poor: weekly means 14 C is an excellent tracer for fossil fuel CO 2
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—› proxies/surrogates needed to substitute 14 CO 2 observations Carbon Monoxide (CO)
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CO/CO 2 fossil fuel emission ratios 2000 EDGAR V3.2 FT 2000 (Olivier et al., 2005) mmol / mol 1020304050600 annual mean emissions on global 1°x1° grid IER mean 2000 (Scholz et al., IER 2005) hourly emissions on 50 km x 50 km grid
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Comparison of measured and REMO-modelled atmospheric CO and CO 2 (foss) CO and CO 2 (foss) corrected with 222 Rn(obs)/ 222 Rn(mod)
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Comparison of measured and REMO-modelled CO/CO 2 (foss) ratios Mean ratios [ppb/ppm]: Observations: 13.5±2.5 REMO & EDGAR: 12.7±0.6 REMO & IER: 11.0±0.8 CO 2 (foss) corr RMSE [%] REMO & EDGAR: 21.4 REMO & IER: 42.7
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Conclusions (I): Fossil fuel CO 2 emissions in Europe contribute almost half to the continental CO 2 signal. Monthly mean fossil fuel CO 2 levels at urban sites can be determined by high precision 14 CO 2 measurements to better than ±10% in winter and about ±30% in summer. At remote sites, the mean fossil fuel CO 2 signal is small (1-5 ppm) and can be determined by 14 CO 2 measurements only to about 30%. 14 C-derived fossil fuel CO 2 at selected stations is needed to validate emissions inventories and assess model estimates of fossil fuel CO 2.
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Conclusions (II): CO is a potentially applicable surrogate tracer for fossil fuel CO 2, however, Emissions inventories of CO and fossil fuel CO 2 are yet not accurate enough to apply it quantitatively, Non-fossil CO sources, in particular soil emissions and their temporal variations, strongly influence the results and need to be estimated more accurately, The catchment area and relative mix of emissions needs to be known accurately, this requires modelling, Validation at a larger number of sites is necessary e.g. at one site per country, at least in Europe.
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Thank you !
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Radiocarbon 14 C ( 14 C, radioactive life time = 8300 years) Natural 14 C production by reactions of neutrons from cosmic radiation with atmospheric Nitrogen natural atmospheric background level Artificial 14 C production via atmospheric nuclear weapon tests in the 1950s and 1960s „Negative 14 C source“ via burning of fossil fuels and cement production
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Long-term 14 CO 2 observations in Europe „clean“ 14 CO 2 background level in the Alps Depletion of the 14 CO 2 level close to fossil fuel sources Suess effect bomb tests
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Monthly mean fossil fuel CO 2 at Schauinsland station and in Heidelberg mean fossil fuel CO 2 offset: Schauinsland: ca. 1.4 ppm Heidelberg: ca. 10 ppm
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Regional Atmospheric Model REMO 0.5° x 0.5° horizontal resolution 20 vertical layers Semi-hemispheric model domain (> 30°N) Online tracer transport Prescribed emissions and surface fluxes Parameterization of CO chemistry Initial and lateral boundary conditions: Metorology: ECMWF analyses CO:MOZART global CTM (Horowitz et al., 2003) CO 2 :TM3 global transport model (Heimann and Körner, 2003)
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Surface fluxes used in REMO CO Emissions Fossil fuel burning (EDGAR V3.2 extrapolated) Fossil fuel burning in Europe (IER 2000, extrap.) Fuelwood burning (EDGAR V3.2) Agricultural waste burning (EDGAR V3.2) Biomass bruning (Hao and Liu, 1994) Soil emission (Müller, 1992) Ocean emission (Brasseur et al., 1998) CO 2 Surface fluxes Fossil fuel burning (EDGAR V3.2 extrapolated) Fossil fuel burning in Europe (IER 2000, extrap.) Terrestrial Biosphere Model BIOME-BGC (Churkina et al., 2003) Ocean fluxes (Takahashi et al., 1999)
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Comparison of measured and REMO-modelled CO/ffCO 2 ratios Mean ratios [ppb/ppm]: Observations: 13.5±2.5 REMO & EDGAR: 12.7±0.6 REMO & IER: 11.0±0.8 EDGAR (only FF): 11.2 IER (only FF): 12.4
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Comparison of measured and REMO-modelled CO/CO 2 (foss) ratios EDGAR(only foss):34.4 IER(only foss): 28.8 Mean ratios [ppb/ppm]: Observations: 13.5±2.5 REMO & EDGAR: 12.7±0.6 REMO & IER: 11.0±0.8 CO 2 (foss) corr RMSE [%] REMO & EDGAR: 21.4 REMO & IER: 42.7
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Measured CO 2 (foss) mixing ratio Data provided by R. Neubert (Lutjewad) and K. Rozanski (Krakow) Comparison with REMO 35 ppm 5 ppm 20 ppm 35 ppm
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