Attribution of individual methane and carbon dioxide emission sources using EMIT observations from space.
Andrew K ThorpeRobert O GreenDavid R ThompsonPhilip G BrodrickJohn W ChapmanClayton D ElderItziar Irakulis-LoitxateDaniel H CusworthAlana K AyasseRiley M DurenChristian FrankenbergLuis GuanterJohn R WordenPhilip E DennisonDar A RobertsKatherine Dana ChadwickMichael L EastwoodJay E FahlenCharles E MillerPublished in: Science advances (2023)
Carbon dioxide and methane emissions are the two primary anthropogenic climate-forcing agents and an important source of uncertainty in the global carbon budget. Uncertainties are further magnified when emissions occur at fine spatial scales (<1 km), making attribution challenging. We present the first observations from NASA's Earth Surface Mineral Dust Source Investigation (EMIT) imaging spectrometer showing quantification and attribution of fine-scale methane (0.3 to 73 tonnes CH 4 hour -1 ) and carbon dioxide sources (1571 to 3511 tonnes CO 2 hour -1 ) spanning the oil and gas, waste, and energy sectors. For selected countries observed during the first 30 days of EMIT operations, methane emissions varied at a regional scale, with the largest total emissions observed for Turkmenistan (731 ± 148 tonnes CH 4 hour -1 ). These results highlight the contributions of current and planned point source imagers in closing global carbon budgets.
Keyphrases
- carbon dioxide
- municipal solid waste
- life cycle
- blood pressure
- high resolution
- anaerobic digestion
- air pollution
- drinking water
- room temperature
- climate change
- sewage sludge
- health risk assessment
- fatty acid
- mass spectrometry
- health risk
- ionic liquid
- photodynamic therapy
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- fluorescence imaging