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A measurement-based verification framework for UK greenhouse gas emissions: an overview of the Greenhouse gAs Uk and Global Emissions (GAUGE) project

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dc.creator Palmer, Paul I.
dc.creator O'Doherty, Simon
dc.creator Allen, Grant
dc.creator Bower, Keith
dc.creator Bösch, Hartmut
dc.creator Chipperfield, Martyn P.
dc.creator Connors, Sarah
dc.creator Dhomse, Sandip
dc.creator Feng, Liang
dc.creator Finch, Douglas P.
dc.creator Gallagher, Martin W.
dc.creator Gloor, Emanuel
dc.creator Gonzi, Siegfried
dc.creator Harris, Neil R. P.
dc.creator Helfter, Carole
dc.creator Humpage, Neil
dc.creator Kerridge, Brian
dc.creator Knappett, Diane
dc.creator Jones, Roderic L.
dc.creator Le Breton, Michael
dc.creator Lunt, Mark F.
dc.creator Manning, Alistair J.
dc.creator Matthiesen, Stephan
dc.creator Muller, Jennifer B. A.
dc.creator Mullinger, Neil
dc.creator Nemitz, Eiko
dc.creator O'Shea, Sebastian
dc.creator Parker, Robert J.
dc.creator Percival, Carl J.
dc.creator Pitt, Joseph
dc.creator Riddick, Stuart N.
dc.creator Rigby, Matthew
dc.creator Sembhi, Harjinder
dc.creator Siddans, Richard
dc.creator Skelton, Robert L.
dc.creator Smith, Paul
dc.creator Sonderfeld, Hannah
dc.creator Stanley, Kieran
dc.creator Stavert, Ann R.
dc.creator Wenger, Angelina
dc.creator White, Emily
dc.creator Wilson, Christopher
dc.creator Young, Dickon
dc.date 2018-09-07T15:01:03Z
dc.date 2018-09-07T15:01:03Z
dc.date 2018-08-17
dc.date.accessioned 2022-05-25T16:38:18Z
dc.date.available 2022-05-25T16:38:18Z
dc.identifier Paul I. Palmer, Simon O'Doherty, Grant Allen, et. al., A measurement-based verification framework for UK greenhouse gas emissions: an overview of the Greenhouse gAs Uk and Global Emissions (GAUGE) project. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Volume 18, Issue 16, pp11753-11777, 2018
dc.identifier 1680-7367
dc.identifier https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-18-11753-2018
dc.identifier http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/13462
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/182319
dc.description We describe the motivation, design, and execution of the Greenhouse gAs Uk and Global Emissions (GAUGE) project. The overarching scientific objective of GAUGE was to use atmospheric data to estimate the magnitude, distribution, and uncertainty of the UK greenhouse gas (GHG, defined here as CO2, CH4, and N2O) budget, 2013–2015. To address this objective, we established a multi-year and interlinked measurement and data analysis programme, building on an established tall-tower GHG measurement network. The calibrated measurement network comprises ground-based, airborne, ship-borne, balloon-borne, and space-borne GHG sensors. Our choice of measurement technologies and measurement locations reflects the heterogeneity of UK GHG sources, which range from small point sources such as landfills to large, diffuse sources such as agriculture. Atmospheric mole fraction data collected at the tall towers and on the ships provide information on sub-continental fluxes, representing the backbone to the GAUGE network. Additional spatial and temporal details of GHG fluxes over East Anglia were inferred from data collected by a regional network. Data collected during aircraft flights were used to study the transport of GHGs on local and regional scales. We purposely integrated new sensor and platform technologies into the GAUGE network, allowing us to lay the foundations of a strengthened UK capability to verify national GHG emissions beyond the project lifetime. For example, current satellites provide sparse and seasonally uneven sampling over the UK mainly because of its geographical size and cloud cover. This situation will improve with new and future satellite instruments, e.g. measurements of CH4 from the TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) aboard Sentinel-5P. We use global, nested, and regional atmospheric transport models and inverse methods to infer geographically resolved CO2 and CH4 fluxes. This multi-model approach allows us to study model spread in a posteriori flux estimates. These models are used to determine the relative importance of different measurements to infer the UK GHG budget. Attributing observed GHG variations to specific sources is a major challenge. Within a UK-wide spatial context we used two approaches: (1) Δ14CO2 and other relevant isotopologues (e.g. δ13CCH4) from collected air samples to quantify the contribution from fossil fuel combustion and other sources, and (2) geographical separation of individual sources, e.g. agriculture, using a high-density measurement network. Neither of these represents a definitive approach, but they will provide invaluable information about GHG source attribution when they are adopted as part of a more comprehensive, long-term national GHG measurement programme. We also conducted a number of case studies, including an instrumented landfill experiment that provided a test bed for new technologies and flux estimation methods. We anticipate that results from the GAUGE project will help inform other countries on how to use atmospheric data to quantify their nationally determined contributions to the Paris Agreement.
dc.language en
dc.publisher Elsevier
dc.rights Attribution 4.0 International
dc.rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.title A measurement-based verification framework for UK greenhouse gas emissions: an overview of the Greenhouse gAs Uk and Global Emissions (GAUGE) project
dc.type Article


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