1. A renewed rise in global HCFC-141b emissions between 2017-2021.
- Author
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Western, Luke, Redington, Alison, Manning, Alistair, Trudinger, Cathy, Hu, Lei, Henne, Stephan, Fang, Xuekun, Kuijpers, Lambert, Theodoridi, Christina, Godwin, David, Arduini, Jgor, Dunse, Bronwyn, Engel, Andreas, Fraser, Paul, Harth, Christina, Krummel, Paul, Maione, Michela, Mühle, Jens, ODoherty, Simon, Park, Hyeri, Park, Sunyoung, Reimann, Stefan, Salameh, Peter, Say, Daniel, Schmidt, Roland, Schuck, Tanja, Siso, Carolina, Stanley, Kieran, Vimont, Isaac, Vollmer, Martin, Young, Dickon, Prinn, Ronald, Weiss, Ray, Montzka, Stephen, and Rigby, Matthew
- Abstract
Global emissions of the ozone-depleting gas HCFC-141b (1,1-dichloro-1-fluoroethane, CH3CCl2F) derived from measurements of atmospheric mole fractions increased between 2017 and 2021 despite a fall in reported production and consumption of HCFC-141b for dispersive uses. HCFC-141b is a controlled substance under the Montreal Protocol, and its phase-out is currently underway, after a peak in reported consumption and production in developing (Article 5) countries in 2013. If reported production and consumption are correct, our study suggests that the 2017-2021 rise is due to an increase in emissions from the bank when appliances containing HCFC-141b reach the end of their life, or from production of HCFC-141b not reported for dispersive uses. Regional emissions have been estimated between 2017-2020 for all regions where measurements have sufficient sensitivity to emissions. This includes the regions of northwestern Europe, east Asia, the United States and Australia, where emissions decreased by a total of 2.3 ± 4.6 Ggyr-1, compared to a mean global increase of 3.0 ± 1.2 Ggyr-1 over the same period. Collectively these regions only account for around 30% of global emissions in 2020. We are not able to pinpoint the source regions or specific activities responsible for the recent global emission rise.
- Published
- 2022