Literature DB >> 24964395

A new high-resolution N2O emission inventory for China in 2008.

Feng Zhou1, Ziyin Shang, Philippe Ciais, Shu Tao, Shilong Piao, Peter Raymond, Canfei He, Bengang Li, Rong Wang, Xuhui Wang, Shushi Peng, Zhenzhong Zeng, Han Chen, Na Ying, Xikang Hou, Peng Xu.   

Abstract

The amount and geographic distribution of N2O emissions over China remain largely uncertain. In this study, county-level and 0.1° × 0.1° gridded anthropogenic N2O emission inventories for China (PKU-N2O) in 2008 are developed based on high-resolution activity data and regional emission factors (EFs) and parameters. These new estimates are compared with previous inventories, and with two sensitivity tests: one that uses high-resolution activity data but the default IPCC methodology (S1) and the other that uses regional EFs and parameters but starts from coarser-resolution activity data. The total N2O emissions are 2150 GgN2O/yr (interquartile range from 1174 to 2787 GgN2O/yr). Agriculture contributes 64% of the total, followed by energy (17%), indirect emissions (12%), wastes (5%), industry (2.8%), and wildfires (0.2%). Our national emission total is 17% greater than that of the EDGAR v4.2 global product sampled over China and is also greater than the GAINS-China, NDRC, and S1 estimates by 10%, 50%, and 17%, respectively. We also found that using uniform EFs and parameters or starting from national/provincial data causes systematic spatial biases compared to PKU-N2O. Spatial analysis shows nonlinear relationships between N2O emission intensities and urbanization. Per-capita and per-GDP N2O emissions increase gradually with an increase in the urban population fraction from 0.3 to 0.9 among 2884 counties, and N2O emission density increases with urban expansion.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24964395     DOI: 10.1021/es5018027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  6 in total

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3.  Urbanization-induced population migration has reduced ambient PM2.5 concentrations in China.

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5.  Hotspots for Nitrogen and Phosphorus Losses from Food Production in China: A County-Scale Analysis.

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Journal:  Environ Sci Technol       Date:  2018-04-27       Impact factor: 9.028

6.  Rainfall increasing offsets the negative effects of nighttime warming on GHGs and wheat yield in North China Plain.

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Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-03-22       Impact factor: 4.379

  6 in total

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