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Policy-Relevant Assessment of Urban CO2 Emissions
Author(s) -
Thomas Lauvaux,
K. R. Gurney,
N. L. Miles,
K. J. Davis,
Scott J. Richardson,
Aijun Deng,
Brian Nathan,
Tomohiro Oda,
Jonathan Wang,
Lucy R. Hutyra,
J. C. Turnbull
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/acs.est.0c00343
Subject(s) - greenhouse gas , environmental science , fossil fuel , inversion (geology) , estimation , scale (ratio) , atmospheric emissions , natural resource economics , atmospheric sciences , geography , engineering , economics , ecology , paleontology , cartography , systems engineering , structural basin , geology , biology , waste management
Global fossil fuel carbon dioxide (FFCO 2 ) emissions will be dictated to a great degree by the trajectory of emissions from urban areas. Conventional methods to quantify urban FFCO 2 emissions typically rely on self-reported economic/energy activity data transformed into emissions via standard emission factors. However, uncertainties in these traditional methods pose a roadblock to implementation of effective mitigation strategies, independently monitor long-term trends, and assess policy outcomes. Here, we demonstrate the applicability of the integration of a dense network of greenhouse gas sensors with a science-driven building and street-scale FFCO 2 emissions estimation through the atmospheric CO 2 inversion process. Whole-city FFCO 2 emissions agree within 3% annually. Current self-reported inventory emissions for the city of Indianapolis are 35% lower than our optimal estimate, with significant differences across activity sectors. Differences remain, however, regarding the spatial distribution of sectoral FFCO 2 emissions, underconstrained despite the inclusion of coemitted species information.

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