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Tracking city CO2 emissions from space using a high-resolution inverse modeling approach: a case study for Berlin, Germany

MPG-Autoren
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Pillai,  Dhanyalekshmi
Airborne Trace Gas Measurements and Mesoscale Modelling, Dr. habil. C. Gerbig, Department Biogeochemical Systems, Prof. M. Heimann, Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Max Planck Society;

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Gerbig,  Christoph
Airborne Trace Gas Measurements and Mesoscale Modelling, Dr. habil. C. Gerbig, Department Biogeochemical Systems, Prof. M. Heimann, Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Max Planck Society;

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Koch,  Thomas
Department Biogeochemical Systems, Prof. M. Heimann, Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Max Planck Society;

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Marshall,  Julia
Satellite-based Remote Sensing of Greenhouse Gases, Dr. J. Marshall, Department Biogeochemical Systems, Prof. M. Heimann, Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Max Planck Society;

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Zitation

Pillai, D., Buchwitz, M., Gerbig, C., Koch, T., Reuter, M., Bovensmann, H., et al. (2016). Tracking city CO2 emissions from space using a high-resolution inverse modeling approach: a case study for Berlin, Germany. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 16(15), 9591-9610. doi:10.5194/acp-16-9591-2016.


Zitierlink: https://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0029-BC0D-9
Zusammenfassung
Currently 52 % of the world's population resides in urban areas and as a consequence, approximately 70 % of fossil fuel emissions of CO2 arise from cities. This fact in combination with large uncertainties associated with quantifying urban emissions due to lack of appropriate measurements makes it crucial to obtain new measurements useful to identify and quantify urban emissions. This is required, for example, for the assessment of emission mitigation strategies and their effectiveness. Here we investigate the potential of a satellite mission like Carbon Monitoring Satellite (CarbonSat), proposed to the European Space Agency (ESA) – to retrieve the city emissions globally, taking into account a realistic description of the expected retrieval errors, the spatiotemporal distribution of CO2 fluxes, and atmospheric transport. To achieve this we use (i) a high-resolution modeling framework consisting of the Weather Research Forecasting model with a greenhouse gas module (WRF-GHG), which is used to simulate the atmospheric observations of column averaged CO2 dry air mole fractions (XCO2), and (ii) a Bayesian inversion method to derive anthropogenic CO2 emissions and their errors from the CarbonSat XCO2 observations. We focus our analysis on Berlin in Germany using CarbonSat's cloud-free overpasses for one reference year. The dense (wide swath) CarbonSat simulated observations with high-spatial resolution (approx. 2 km × 2 km) permits one to map the city CO2 emission plume with a peak enhancement of typically 0.8–1.35 ppm relative to the background. By performing a Bayesian inversion, it is shown that the random error (RE) of the retrieved Berlin CO2 emission for a single overpass is typically less than 8 to 10 MtCO2 yr−1 (about 15 to 20 % of the total city emission). The range of systematic errors (SE) of the retrieved fluxes due to various sources of error (measurement, modeling, and inventories) is also quantified. Depending on the assumptions made, the SE is less than about 6 to 10 MtCO2 yr−1 for most cases. We find that in particular systematic modeling-related errors can be quite high during the summer months due to substantial XCO2 variations caused by biogenic CO2 fluxes at and around the target region. When making the extreme worst-case assumption that biospheric XCO2 variations cannot be modeled at all (which is overly pessimistic), the SE of the retrieved emission is found to be larger than 10 MtCO2 yr−1 for about half of the sufficiently cloud-free overpasses, and for some of the overpasses we found that SE may even be on the order of magnitude of the anthropogenic emission. This indicates that biogenic XCO2 variations cannot be neglected but must be considered during forward and/or inverse modeling. Overall, we conclude that CarbonSat is well suited to obtain city-scale CO2 emissions as needed to enhance our current understanding of anthropogenic carbon fluxes and that CarbonSat or CarbonSat-like satellites should be an important component of a future global carbon emission monitoring system.