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Regional trends and drivers of the global methane budget

Authors :
Stavert, Ann R.
Saunois, Marielle
Canadell, Josep G.
Poulter, Benjamin
Jackson, Robert B.
Regnier, Pierre
Lauerwald, Ronny
Raymond, Peter A.
Allen, George H.
Patra, Prabir K.
Bergamaschi, Peter
Bousquet, Phillipe
Chandra, Naveen
Ciais, Philippe
Gustafson, Adrian
Ishizawa, Misa
Ito, Akihiko
Kleinen, Thomas
Maksyutov, Shamil
McNorton, Joe
Melton, Joe R.
Müller, Jurek
Niwa, Yosuke
Peng, Shushi
Riley, William J.
Segers, Arjo
Tian, Hanqin
Tsuruta, Aki
Yin, Yi
Zhang, Zhen
Zheng, Bo
Zhuang, Qianlai
Stavert, Ann R.
Saunois, Marielle
Canadell, Josep G.
Poulter, Benjamin
Jackson, Robert B.
Regnier, Pierre
Lauerwald, Ronny
Raymond, Peter A.
Allen, George H.
Patra, Prabir K.
Bergamaschi, Peter
Bousquet, Phillipe
Chandra, Naveen
Ciais, Philippe
Gustafson, Adrian
Ishizawa, Misa
Ito, Akihiko
Kleinen, Thomas
Maksyutov, Shamil
McNorton, Joe
Melton, Joe R.
Müller, Jurek
Niwa, Yosuke
Peng, Shushi
Riley, William J.
Segers, Arjo
Tian, Hanqin
Tsuruta, Aki
Yin, Yi
Zhang, Zhen
Zheng, Bo
Zhuang, Qianlai
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The ongoing development of the Global Carbon Project (GCP) global methane (CH4) budget shows a continuation of increasing CH4 emissions and CH4 accumulation in the atmosphere during 2000–2017. Here, we decompose the global budget into 19 regions (18 land and 1 oceanic) and five key source sectors to spatially attribute the observed global trends. A comparison of top-down (TD) (atmospheric and transport model-based) and bottom-up (BU) (inventory- and process model-based) CH4 emission estimates demonstrates robust temporal trends with CH4 emissions increasing in 16 of the 19 regions. Five regions—China, Southeast Asia, USA, South Asia, and Brazil—account for >40% of the global total emissions (their anthropogenic and natural sources together totaling >270 Tg CH4 yr−1 in 2008–2017). Two of these regions, China and South Asia, emit predominantly anthropogenic emissions (>75%) and together emit more than 25% of global anthropogenic emissions. China and the Middle East show the largest increases in total emission rates over the 2000 to 2017 period with regional emissions increasing by >20%. In contrast, Europe and Korea and Japan show a steady decline in CH4 emission rates, with total emissions decreasing by ~10% between 2000 and 2017. Coal mining, waste (predominantly solid waste disposal) and livestock (especially enteric fermentation) are dominant drivers of observed emissions increases while declines appear driven by a combination of waste and fossil emission reductions. As such, together these sectors present the greatest risks of further increasing the atmospheric CH4 burden and the greatest opportunities for greenhouse gas abatement.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, text, English, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1291169888
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111.gcb.15901