4.7 Article

Atmospheric observation-based estimation of fossil fuel CO2 emissions from regions of central and southern California

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 664, Issue -, Pages 381-391

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.01.081

Keywords

Atmospheric inversion; Tower-based measurements; ffco2 emissions; Seasonal variation; SFBA and SoCAB; Radicocarbon

Funding

  1. NOAA-OGP
  2. CARB Research Division (CARB) under U.S. Department of Energy [11-306, DE-AC02-05CH11231]

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Combustion of fossil fuel is the dominant source of greenhouse gas emissions to the atmosphere in California. Here, we describe radiocarbon ((CO2)-C-14) measurements and atmospheric inverse modeling to estimate fossil fuel CO2 (ffCO(2)) emissions for 2009-2012 from a site in central California, and for June 2013-May 2014 from two sites in southern California. A priori predicted ffCO(2) mixing ratios are computed based on regional atmospheric transport model (WRF-STILT) footprints and an hourly ffCO(2) prior emission map (Vulcan 2.2). Regional inversions using observations from the central California site suggest that emissions from the San Francisco Bay Area (SFBA) are higher in winter and lower in summer. Taking all years together, the average of a total of fifteen 3-month inversions from 2009 to 2012 suggests ffCO(2) emissions from SFBA were within 6 +/- 35% of the a priori estimate for that region, where posterior emission uncertainties are reported as 95% confidence intervals. Results for four 3-month inversions using measurements in Los Angeles South Coast Air Basin (SoCAB) (luring June 2013-May 2014 suggest that emissions in SoCAB are within 13 +/- 28% of the a priori estimate for that region, with marginal detection of any seasonality. While emissions from the SFBA and SoCAB urban regions (containing similar to 50% of prior emissions from California) are constrained by the observations, emissions from the remaining regions are less constrained, suggesting that additional observations will be valuable to more accurately estimate total ffCO(2) emissions from California as a whole. (C) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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