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Urban/industrial pollution for the New York City–Washington, D. C., corridor, 1996–1998: 1. Providing independent verification of CO and PCE emissions inventories
Author(s) -
Barnes Diana H.,
Wofsy Steven C.,
Fehlau Brian P.,
Gottlieb Elaine W.,
Elkins James W.,
Dutton Geoffrey S.,
Montzka Stephen A.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2001jd001116
Subject(s) - environmental science , pollution , plume , air pollution , emission inventory , air quality index , atmospheric sciences , meteorology , environmental engineering , geography , chemistry , geology , ecology , organic chemistry , biology
Atmospheric mixing ratios of carbon monoxide (CO) and perchloroethylene (PCE, C 2 Cl 4 ) were measured above the canopy at Harvard forest, MA every half‐hour for 3 years starting in January 1996. Pollution enhancements are strongly correlated with winds from the southwest, the direction of the New York City–Washington, D. C., corridor, as compared to background levels observed during northwest winds traveling from Canada. We establish the ratio of CO to PCE pollution enhancements by wind direction, by season, and by year and use these results to test the quality of county‐level and national source emission inventories for these two gases. The EPA carbon monoxide emission county‐level inventories and the McCulloch and Midgley sales‐based national‐level PCE release estimates are found to be in accord with our independent observations of urban/industrial releases. For the New York City–Washington, D. C., corridor the inventory‐based CO I /PCE I emissions ratio of 584 (kg/kg) for 1996 falls well within the range of observationally‐based ΔCO/ΔPCE pollution plume ratios of 388 to 706 (kg/kg) and is only 11% higher than the observed mean of 521 ± 90 (kg/kg). On the basis of this agreement, PCE emission estimates for 1997 and 1998 are derived from the CO inventory emissions values and the observed ΔCO/ΔPCE ratios in pollution plumes for those years; despite the call for voluntary cutbacks, urban/industrial emissions of PCE appear to be on the rise.

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