The CO2 Human Emissions (CHE) Project: First Steps Towards a European Operational Capacity to Monitor Anthropogenic CO2 Emissions

The Paris Agreement of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change is a binding international treaty signed by 196 nations to limit their greenhouse gas emissions through ever-reducing Nationally Determined Contributions and a system of 5-yearly Global Stocktakes in an Enhanced Transpa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in remote sensing 2021-09, Vol.2
Hauptverfasser: Balsamo, Gianpaolo, Engelen, Richard, Thiemert, Daniel, Agusti-Panareda, Anna, Bousserez, Nicolas, Broquet, Grégoire, Brunner, Dominik, Buchwitz, Michael, Chevallier, Frédéric, Choulga, Margarita, Denier Van Der Gon, Hugo, Florentie, Liesbeth, Haussaire, Jean-Matthieu, Janssens-Maenhout, Greet, Jones, Matthew W., Kaminski, Thomas, Krol, Maarten, Le Quéré, Corinne, Marshall, Julia, McNorton, Joe, Prunet, Pascal, Reuter, Maximilian, Peters, Wouter, Scholze, Marko
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Paris Agreement of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change is a binding international treaty signed by 196 nations to limit their greenhouse gas emissions through ever-reducing Nationally Determined Contributions and a system of 5-yearly Global Stocktakes in an Enhanced Transparency Framework. To support this process, the European Commission initiated the design and development of a new Copernicus service element that will use Earth observations mainly to monitor anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emissions. The CO 2 Human Emissions (CHE) project has been successfully coordinating efforts of its 22 consortium partners, to advance the development of a European CO 2 monitoring and verification support (CO2MVS) capacity for anthropogenic CO 2 emissions. Several project achievements are presented and discussed here as examples. The CHE project has developed an enhanced capability to produce global, regional and local CO 2 simulations, with a focus on the representation of anthropogenic sources. The project has achieved advances towards a CO 2 global inversion capability at high resolution to connect atmospheric concentrations to surface emissions. CHE has also demonstrated the use of Earth observations (satellite and ground-based) as well as proxy data for human activity to constrain uncertainties and to enhance the timeliness of CO 2 monitoring. High-resolution global simulations (at 9 km) covering the whole of 2015 (labelled CHE nature runs) fed regional and local simulations over Europe (at 5 km and 1 km resolution) and supported the generation of synthetic satellite observations simulating the contribution of a future dedicated Copernicus CO 2 Monitoring Mission (CO2M).
ISSN:2673-6187
2673-6187
DOI:10.3389/frsen.2021.707247