Global budget of ethane and regional constraints on U.S. sources
Article 2008 en
Authors
YX
Yaping Xiao
JL
Jennifer A. Logan
DJ
Daniel J. Jacob
Abstract
1 min read
We use a 3‐D chemical transport model (the GEOS‐Chem CTM) to evaluate a global emission inventory for ethane (C 2 H 6 ), with a best estimate for the global source of 13 Tg yr −1 , 8.0 Tg yr −1 from fossil fuel production, 2.6 Tg yr −1 from biofuel, and 2.4 Tg yr −1 from biomass burning. About 80% of the source is emitted in the Northern Hemisphere. The model generally provides a reasonable and unbiased simulation of surface air observations, column measurements, and aircraft profiles worldwide, including patterns of geographical and seasonal variability. The main bias is a 20%–30% overestimate at European surface sites. Propagation of the C 2 H 6 seasonal signal from northern midlatitudes to the equatorial western Pacific and the southern tropics demonstrates the dominance of northern midlatitudes as a source of C 2 H 6 worldwide. Interhemispheric transport provides the largest C 2 H 6 source to the Southern Hemisphere (1.7 Tg yr −1 ), and southern biomass burning provides the other major source (1.0 Tg yr −1 ). The C 2 H 6 emission inventory for the United States from the Environmental Protection Agency (0.6 Tg yr −1 ) is considerably lower than our estimate constrained by extensive aircraft observations in the continental boundary layer (2.4 Tg yr −1 ). This appears to reflect a factor 7 underestimate in the fossil fuel source over the south‐central United States. Our estimate of C 2 H 6 emissions, together with observed ratios of CH 4 :C 2 H 6 , suggests that CH 4 emissions from energy production in the U.S. may be underestimated by as much as 50%–100%.
Zitely A. Tzompa‐Sosa, Emmanuel Mahieu, Bruno Franco, Christoph A. Keller, Alexander J. Turner, Detlev Helmig, Alan Fried, Dirk Richter, P. Weibring, J. Walega, Tara I. Yacovitch, S. C. Herndon, Donald R Blake, Frank Hase, James W. Hannigan, Stéphanie Conway, Kimberly Strong, Matthias Schneider, Emily V. Fischer
Yaping Xiao, Daniel J. Jacob, James S. Wang, Jennifer A. Logan, Paul I. Palmer, Parvadha Suntharalingam, Robert M. Yantosca, G. W. Sachse, Donald R Blake, David G. Streets
P. O. Wennberg, Wilton Mui, Debra Wunch, E. A. Kort, Donald R Blake, E. Atlas, G. W. Santoni, Steven C. Wofsy, Glenn S. Diskin, Seongeun Jeong, M. L. Fischer
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.