Literature DB >> 31486640

Seasonally Resolved Excess Urban Methane Emissions from the Baltimore/Washington, DC Metropolitan Region.

Yaoxian Huang1,2, Eric A Kort1, Sharon Gourdji1,3, Anna Karion3, Kimberly Mueller1,3, John Ware1.   

Abstract

Urban areas are increasingly recognized as an important source of methane (CH4), but we have limited seasonally resolved observations of these regions. In this study, we quantify seasonal and annual urban CH4 emissions over the Baltimore, Maryland, and Washington, DC metropolitan regions. We use CH4 atmospheric observations from four tall tower stations and a Lagrangian particle dispersion model to simulate CH4 concentrations at these stations. We directly compare these simulations with observations and use a geostatistical inversion method to determine optimal emissions to match our observations. We use observations spanning four seasons and employ an ensemble approach considering multiple meteorological representations, emission inventories, and upwind CH4 values. Forward simulations in winter, spring, and fall underestimate observed atmospheric CH4 while in summer, simulations overestimate observations because of excess modeled wetland emissions. With ensemble geostatistical inversions, the optimized annual emissions in DC/Baltimore are 39 ± 9 Gg/month (1 δ), 2.0 ± 0.4 times higher than the ensemble mean of bottom-up emission inventories. We find a modest seasonal variability of urban CH4 emissions not captured in current inventories, with optimized summer emissions ∼41% lower than winter, broadly consistent with expectations if emissions are dominated by fugitive natural gas sources that correlate with natural gas usage.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31486640     DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.9b02782

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


  3 in total

1.  Greenhouse gas observations from the Northeast Corridor tower network.

Authors:  Anna Karion; William Callahan; Michael Stock; Steve Prinzivalli; Kristal R Verhulst; Jooil Kim; Peter K Salameh; Israel Lopez-Coto; James Whetstone
Journal:  Earth Syst Sci Data       Date:  2020       Impact factor: 11.333

2.  Home is Where the Pipeline Ends: Characterization of Volatile Organic Compounds Present in Natural Gas at the Point of the Residential End User.

Authors:  Drew R Michanowicz; Archana Dayalu; Curtis L Nordgaard; Jonathan J Buonocore; Molly W Fairchild; Robert Ackley; Jessica E Schiff; Abbie Liu; Nathan G Phillips; Audrey Schulman; Zeyneb Magavi; John D Spengler
Journal:  Environ Sci Technol       Date:  2022-06-28       Impact factor: 11.357

3.  Majority of US urban natural gas emissions unaccounted for in inventories.

Authors:  Maryann R Sargent; Cody Floerchinger; Kathryn McKain; John Budney; Elaine W Gottlieb; Lucy R Hutyra; Joseph Rudek; Steven C Wofsy
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-11-02       Impact factor: 11.205

  3 in total

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