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Atmospheric observations consistent with reported decline in the UK's methane emissions, 2013–2020

Authors :
Mark Lunt
Alistair Manning
Grant Allen
Tim Arnold
Stéphane Bauguitte
Hartmut Boesch
Anita Ganesan
Aoife Grant
Carole Helfter
Eiko Nemitz
Simon O'Doherty
Paul Palmer
Joseph Pitt
Chris Rennick
Daniel Say
Kieran Stanley
Ann Stavert
Dickon Young
Matt Rigby
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2021.

Abstract

Atmospheric measurements can be used as a tool to evaluate national greenhouse gas inventories through inverse modelling. Using eight years of continuous methane (CH4) concentration data, this work assesses the United Kingdom's (UK) CH4 emissions over the period 2013–2020. Using two different inversion methods, we find mean emissions of 2.10 ± 0.09 Tg yr−1 and 2.12 ± 0.26 Tg yr−1 between 2013–2020, and an overall trend of −0.05 ± 0.01 Tg yr−2 and −0.06 ± 0.04 Tg yr−2, a 2–3 % decrease each year. This compares with the mean emissions of 2.23 Tg yr−1 and trend of −0.03 Tg yr−2 (1 % annual decrease) reported in the UK's 2021 inventory between 2013–2019. We examine how sensitive these estimates are to various components of the inversion set-up, such as the measurement network configuration, the prior emissions estimate, the inversion method, and the atmospheric transport model used. We find the decreasing trend to be due primarily to a reduction of emissions from England, which accounts for 70 % of the UK CH4 emissions. Comparisons during 2015 demonstrate consistency when different atmospheric transport models are used to map the relationship between sources and atmospheric observations at the aggregation level of the UK. The posterior annual national means and negative trend are found to be consistent across changes in network configuration. We show, using only two monitoring sites, the same conclusions on mean UK emissions and negative trend would be reached as using the full six-site network, albeit with larger posterior uncertainties. However, emissions estimates from Scotland fail to converge on the same posterior under different inversion setups, highlighting a shortcoming of the current observation network in monitoring all of the UK. Although CH4 emissions in 2020 are estimated to have declined relative to previous years, this decrease is in line with the longer-term emissions trend, and is not necessarily a response to national lockdowns.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4a3015a071dff1615260c09f5bd007dd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2021-548