The potential of satellite spectro-imagery for monitoring CO2 emissions from large cities

被引:53
作者
Broquet, Gregoire [1 ]
Breon, Francois-Marie [1 ]
Renault, Emmanuel [1 ,3 ]
Buchwitz, Michael [2 ]
Reuter, Maximilian [2 ]
Bovensmann, Heinrich [2 ]
Chevallier, Frederic [1 ]
Wu, Lin [1 ]
Ciais, Philippe [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Paris Saclay, LSCE, IPSL, CEA CNRS UVSQ, F-91191 Gif Sur Yvette, France
[2] Univ Bremen FB1, Inst Environm Phys IUP, Otto Hahn Allee 1, D-28334 Bremen, Germany
[3] Serv Hydrog & Oceanog Marine, F-29228 Brest, France
关键词
ATMOSPHERIC CO2; CARBON-DIOXIDE; SPACE; INVERSIONS; SYSTEM; REGION; CH4;
D O I
10.5194/amt-11-681-2018
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
This study assesses the potential of 2 to 10 km resolution imagery of CO2 concentrations retrieved from the shortwave infrared measurements of a space-borne passive spectrometer for monitoring the spatially integrated emissions from the Paris area. Such imagery could be provided by missions similar to CarbonSat, which was studied as a candidate Earth Explorer 8 mission by the European Space Agency (ESA). This assessment is based on observing system simulation experiments (OSSEs) with an atmospheric inversion approach at city scale. The inversion system solves for hourly city CO2 emissions and natural fluxes, or for these fluxes per main anthropogenic sector or ecosystem, during the 6 h before a given satellite overpass. These 6 h correspond to the period during which emissions produce CO2 plumes that can be identified on the image from this overpass. The statistical framework of the inversion accounts for the existence of some prior knowledge with 50% uncertainty on the hourly or sectorial emissions, and with similar to 25% uncertainty on the 6 h mean emissions, from an inventory based on energy use and carbon fuel consumption statistics. The link between the hourly or sectorial emissions and the vertically integrated column of CO2 observed by the satellite is simulated using a coupled flux and atmospheric transport model. This coupled model is built with the information on the spatial and temporal distribution of emissions from the emission inventory produced by the local air-quality agency (Airparif) and a 2 km horizontal resolution atmospheric transport model. Tests are conducted for different realistic simulations of the spatial coverage, resolution, precision and accuracy of the imagery from sun-synchronous polar-orbiting missions, corresponding to the specifications of CarbonSat and Sentinel-5 or extrapolated from these specifications. First, OSSEs are conducted with a rather optimistic configuration in which the inversion system is perfectly informed about the statistics of the limited number of error sources. These OSSEs indicate that the image resolution has to be finer than 4 km to decrease the uncertainty in the 6 h mean emissions by more than 50 %. More complex experiments assess the impact of more realistic error estimates that current inversion methods do not properly account for, in particular, the systematic measurement errors with spatially correlated patterns. These experiments highlight the difficulty to improve current knowledge on CO2 emissions for urban areas like Paris with CO2 observations from satellites, and call for more technological innovations in the remote sensing of vertically integrated columns of CO2 and in the inversion systems that exploit it.
引用
收藏
页码:681 / 708
页数:28
相关论文
共 39 条
  • [1] AIRPARIF, 2013, TECH REP
  • [2] [Anonymous], 2015, ESA
  • [3] Global CO2 fluxes estimated from GOSAT retrievals of total column CO2
    Basu, S.
    Guerlet, S.
    Butz, A.
    Houweling, S.
    Hasekamp, O.
    Aben, I.
    Krummel, P.
    Steele, P.
    Langenfelds, R.
    Torn, M.
    Biraud, S.
    Stephens, B.
    Andrews, A.
    Worthy, D.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2013, 13 (17) : 8695 - 8717
  • [4] Natural land carbon dioxide exchanges in the ECMWF integrated forecasting system: Implementation and offline validation
    Boussetta, Souhail
    Balsamo, Gianpaolo
    Beljaars, Anton
    Panareda, Anna-Agusti
    Calvet, Jean-Christophe
    Jacobs, Cor
    van den Hurk, Bart
    Viterbo, Pedro
    Lafont, Sebastien
    Dutra, Emanuel
    Jarlan, Lionel
    Balzarolo, Manuela
    Papale, Dario
    van der Werf, Guido
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2013, 118 (12) : 5923 - 5946
  • [5] A remote sensing technique for global monitoring of power plant CO2 emissions from space and related applications
    Bovensmann, H.
    Buchwitz, M.
    Burrows, J. P.
    Reuter, M.
    Krings, T.
    Gerilowski, K.
    Schneising, O.
    Heymann, J.
    Tretner, A.
    Erzinger, J.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2010, 3 (04) : 781 - 811
  • [6] An attempt at estimating Paris area CO2 emissions from atmospheric concentration measurements
    Breon, F. M.
    Broquet, G.
    Puygrenier, V.
    Chevallier, F.
    Xueref-Remy, I.
    Ramonet, M.
    Dieudonne, E.
    Lopez, M.
    Schmidt, M.
    Perrussel, O.
    Ciais, P.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2015, 15 (04) : 1707 - 1724
  • [7] The Greenhouse Gas Climate Change Initiative (GHG-CCI): Comparison and quality assessment of near-surface-sensitive satellite-derived CO2 and CH4 global data sets
    Buchwitz, M.
    Reuter, M.
    Schneising, O.
    Boesch, H.
    Guerlet, S.
    Dils, B.
    Aben, I.
    Armante, R.
    Bergamaschi, P.
    Blumenstock, T.
    Bovensmann, H.
    Brunner, D.
    Buchmann, B.
    Burrows, J. P.
    Butz, A.
    Chedin, A.
    Chevallier, F.
    Crevoisier, C. D.
    Deutscher, N. M.
    Frankenberg, C.
    Hase, F.
    Hasekamp, O. P.
    Heymann, J.
    Kaminski, T.
    Laeng, A.
    Lichtenberg, G.
    De Maziere, M.
    Noel, S.
    Notholt, J.
    Orphal, J.
    Popp, C.
    Parker, R.
    Scholze, M.
    Sussmann, R.
    Stiller, G. P.
    Warneke, T.
    Zehner, C.
    Bril, A.
    Crisp, D.
    Griffith, D. W. T.
    Kuze, A.
    O'Dell, C.
    Oshchepkov, S.
    Sherlock, V.
    Suto, H.
    Wennberg, P.
    Wunch, D.
    Yokota, T.
    Yoshida, Y.
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT, 2015, 162 : 344 - 362
  • [8] Carbon Monitoring Satellite (CarbonSat): assessment of atmospheric CO2 and CH4 retrieval errors by error parameterization
    Buchwitz, M.
    Reuter, M.
    Bovensmann, H.
    Pillai, D.
    Heymann, J.
    Schneising, O.
    Rozanov, V.
    Krings, T.
    Burrows, J. P.
    Boesch, H.
    Gerbig, C.
    Meijer, Y.
    Loscher, A.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2013, 6 (12) : 3477 - 3500
  • [9] On the statistical optimality of CO2 atmospheric inversions assimilating CO2 column retrievals
    Chevallier, F.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2015, 15 (19) : 11133 - 11145
  • [10] CO2 surface fluxes at grid point scale estimated from a global 21 year reanalysis of atmospheric measurements
    Chevallier, F.
    Ciais, P.
    Conway, T. J.
    Aalto, T.
    Anderson, B. E.
    Bousquet, P.
    Brunke, E. G.
    Ciattaglia, L.
    Esaki, Y.
    Froehlich, M.
    Gomez, A.
    Gomez-Pelaez, A. J.
    Haszpra, L.
    Krummel, P. B.
    Langenfelds, R. L.
    Leuenberger, M.
    Machida, T.
    Maignan, F.
    Matsueda, H.
    Morgui, J. A.
    Mukai, H.
    Nakazawa, T.
    Peylin, P.
    Ramonet, M.
    Rivier, L.
    Sawa, Y.
    Schmidt, M.
    Steele, L. P.
    Vay, S. A.
    Vermeulen, A. T.
    Wofsy, S.
    Worthy, D.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2010, 115