Seminar: Christian Rödenbeck
Institutsseminar
- Datum: 14.09.2023
- Uhrzeit: 14:30
- Vortragende(r): Christian Rödenbeck
- Raum: Hörsaal (C0.001)
Atmospheric measurements
of the O2/N2 ratio and the CO2 mole fraction (combined into the
conceptual tracer "Atmospheric Potential Oxygen", APO) over
continents have been proposed as a constraint on CO2 emissions
from fossil-fuel burning. Here we assess the suitability of such
APO data to constrain anthropogenic CO2 emissions in Western
Europe, with particular focus on their decadal trends. We use an
inversion of atmospheric transport to esimate spatially and
temporally explicit scaling factors on a bottom-up fossil-fuel
emissions inventory. Based on the small number of currently
available observational records, our CO2 emissions estimates show
relatively large apparent year-to-year variations, exceeding the
expected uncertainty of the bottom-up inventory and precluding the
calculation of statistically significant trends. We were not able
to trace the apparent year-to-year variations back to particular
properties of the APO data. Inversion of synthetic APO data,
however, confirms that data information content and degrees of
freedom are sufficient to successfully correct a counterfactual
prior. Larger sets of measurement stations, such as the recently
started APO observations from the Integrated Carbon Observation
System (ICOS) European research infrastructure, improve the
constraint and may ameliorate possible problems with local signals
or with measurement or model errors at the stations. We further
tested the impact of uncertainties in the O2:CO2 stoichiometries of fossil-fuel burning and
land biospheric exchange and found they are not fundamental
obstacles to estimating decadal trends in fossil-fuel CO2
emissions, though further work on fossil-fuel O2:CO2
stoichiometries seems necessary.