the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
TransCom N2O model inter-comparison – Part 2: Atmospheric inversion estimates of N2O emissions
R. L. Thompson
K. Ishijima
E. Saikawa
M. Corazza
U. Karstens
P. K. Patra
P. Bergamaschi
F. Chevallier
E. Dlugokencky
R. G. Prinn
R. F. Weiss
S. O'Doherty
P. J. Fraser
L. P. Steele
P. B. Krummel
A. Vermeulen
Y. Tohjima
A. Jordan
L. Haszpra
M. Steinbacher
S. Van der Laan
F. Meinhardt
M. E. Popa
J. Moncrieff
P. Bousquet
Related authors
Accurate national methane (CH4) emission estimates are essential for tracking progress towards climate goals. This study compares estimates from Finland, which use different methods and scales, and shows how well a global model estimates emissions within a country. The bottom-up estimates vary a lot but constraining them with atmospheric CH4 measurements brought the estimates closer together. We also highlight the importance of quantifying natural emissions alongside anthropogenic emissions.
hydrogen economy. Here, we use the aging air found in the polar snowpack to reconstruct H2 levels over the past 100 years. We find that H2 levels increased by 30 % over Greenland and 60 % over Antarctica during the 20th century.
top-downmethods, are important to verify national inventories or produce a stand-alone estimate where no inventory exists. We present a novel top-down method to estimate emissions. This approach uses a fast method called an integrated nested Laplacian approximation to estimate how these emissions are correlated with other emissions in different locations and at different times.
inversiontechnique. Compared with the current national inventory, our results show lower emissions for Cambridgeshire, possibly due to waste sector emission differences.
Related subject area
Accurate national methane (CH4) emission estimates are essential for tracking progress towards climate goals. This study compares estimates from Finland, which use different methods and scales, and shows how well a global model estimates emissions within a country. The bottom-up estimates vary a lot but constraining them with atmospheric CH4 measurements brought the estimates closer together. We also highlight the importance of quantifying natural emissions alongside anthropogenic emissions.
coal-to-gasenergy transition in China. However, this small loss rate can be misleading given China's high gas imports.