Urban Emissions of CO₂ from Davos, Switzerland: The First Real-Time Monitoring System Using an Atmospheric Inversion Technique

Anthropogenic emissions from urban areas represent 70% of the fossil fuel carbon emitted globally according to carbon emission inventories. The authors present here the first operational system able to monitor in near–real time daily emission estimates, using a mesoscale atmospheric inversion framew...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied meteorology and climatology 2013-12, Vol.52 (12), p.2654-2668
Hauptverfasser: Lauvaux, Thomas, Miles, Natasha L., Richardson, Scott J., Deng, Aijun, Stauffer, David R., Davis, Kenneth J., Jacobson, Gloria, Rella, Chris, Calonder, Gian-Paul, DeCola, Philip L.
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container_end_page 2668
container_issue 12
container_start_page 2654
container_title Journal of applied meteorology and climatology
container_volume 52
creator Lauvaux, Thomas
Miles, Natasha L.
Richardson, Scott J.
Deng, Aijun
Stauffer, David R.
Davis, Kenneth J.
Jacobson, Gloria
Rella, Chris
Calonder, Gian-Paul
DeCola, Philip L.
description Anthropogenic emissions from urban areas represent 70% of the fossil fuel carbon emitted globally according to carbon emission inventories. The authors present here the first operational system able to monitor in near–real time daily emission estimates, using a mesoscale atmospheric inversion framework over the city of Davos, Switzerland, before, during, and after the World Economic Forum 2012 Meeting (WEF-2012). Two instruments that continuously measured atmospheric mixing ratios of greenhouse gases (GHGs) were deployed at two locations from 23 December 2011 to 3 March 2012: one site was located in the urban area and the other was out of the valley in the surrounding mountains. Carbon dioxide, methane, and carbon monoxide were measured continuously at both sites. The Weather Research and Forecasting mesoscale atmospheric model (WRF), in four-dimensional data assimilation mode, was used to simulate the transport of GHGs over the valley of Davos at 1.3-km resolution. Wintertime emissions prior to the WEF-2012 were about 40% higher than the initial annual inventory estimate, corresponding to the use of heating fuel in the winter. Daily inverse fluxes were highly correlated with the local climate, especially during the severe cold wave that affected most of Europe in early February 2012. During the WEF-2012, emissions dropped by 35% relative to the first month of the deployment, despite similar temperatures and the presence of several thousand participants at the meeting. On the basis of composite diurnal cycles of hourly CO/CO₂ ratios, the absence of traffic peaks during the WEF-2012 meeting indicated that change in road emissions is potentially responsible for the observed decrease in the city emissions during the meeting.
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source American Meteorological Society; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Jstor Complete Legacy; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Accuracy
Anthropogenic factors
Atmospheric models
Atmospherics
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide emissions
Carbon monoxide
Cities
Climatology. Bioclimatology. Climate change
Cold
Cold waves
Data collection
Downtowns
Earth, ocean, space
Economic activity
Economic summit conferences
Emission inventories
Emissions
Estimates
Exact sciences and technology
External geophysics
Global economy
Greenhouse gases
Meteorology
Methods
Mixing ratios
Monitoring systems
Mountains
Pollutant emissions
Ratios
Traffic estimation
Urban areas
Valleys
title Urban Emissions of CO₂ from Davos, Switzerland: The First Real-Time Monitoring System Using an Atmospheric Inversion Technique
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