Estimating global ammonia (NH3) emissions based on IASI observations from 2008 to 2018
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Published:2022-08-12
Issue:15
Volume:22
Page:10375-10388
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Luo Zhenqi, Zhang YuzhongORCID, Chen Wei, Van Damme Martin, Coheur Pierre-François, Clarisse Lieven
Abstract
Abstract. Emissions of ammonia (NH3) to the atmosphere impact human
health, climate, and ecosystems via their critical contributions to
secondary aerosol formation. However, the estimation of NH3 emissions is associated
with large uncertainties because of inadequate knowledge about agricultural
sources. Here, we use satellite observations from the Infrared Atmospheric
Sounding Interferometer (IASI) and simulations from the GEOS-Chem model to
constrain global NH3 emissions over the period from 2008 to 2018. We update
the prior NH3 emission fluxes with the ratio between biases in
simulated NH3 concentrations and effective NH3 lifetimes against
the loss of the NHx family. In contrast to the approximate factor of 2
discrepancies between top-down and bottom-up emissions found in previous
studies, our method results in a global land NH3 emission of 78 (70–92) Tg a−1, which is ∼30 % higher than the bottom-up estimates.
Regionally, we find that the bottom-up inventory underestimates NH3
emissions over South America and tropical Africa by 60 %–70 %, indicating
underrepresentation of agricultural sources in these regions. We find a
good agreement within 10 % between bottom-up and top-down estimates over
the US, Europe, and eastern China. Our results also show significant
increases in NH3 emissions over India (13 % per decade), tropical
Africa (33 % per decade), and South America (18 % per decade)
during our study period, which is consistent with the intensifying agricultural
activity in these regions in the past decade. We find that the inclusion of the
sulfur dioxide (SO2) column observed by satellite is crucial for more
accurate inference of NH3 emission trends over important source regions
such as India and China where SO2 emissions have changed rapidly in
recent years.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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