2016
DOI: 10.5194/acp-16-15653-2016
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Exploiting stagnant conditions to derive robust emission ratio estimates for CO<sub>2</sub>, CO and volatile organic compounds in Paris

Abstract: We propose an approach to estimate urban emission ratios that takes advantage of the enhanced local urban signal in the atmosphere at low wind speed. We apply it to estimate monthly ratios between CO 2 , CO and some VOCs from several atmospheric concentration measurement datasets acquired in the centre of Paris between 2010 and 2014. We find that this approach is not very sensitive to the regional background level definition and that, in the case of Paris, it samples all days (weekdays and weekends) and all ho… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…Wenger et al: Atmospheric radiocarbon measurements to quantify CO 2 emissions merical Atmospheric dispersion Modelling Environment) developed by the UK Met Office (Jones et al, 2007). Hypothetical particles are released into the model atmosphere at a rate of 10 000 per hour at the location of the observation site and transported backward in time for 30 d. It is assumed that when a particle resides in the lowest 0-40 m of the model atmosphere, pollution from ground-based emission sources is added to the air parcel (Arnold et al, 2018;Manning et al, 2011). The particle residence times in this surface layer are integrated over the 30 d simulation to calculate a "footprint" of each measurement that quantifies the sensitivity of the observation to a grid surrounding the measurement site (Manning et al, 2011).…”
Section: Name Simulationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Wenger et al: Atmospheric radiocarbon measurements to quantify CO 2 emissions merical Atmospheric dispersion Modelling Environment) developed by the UK Met Office (Jones et al, 2007). Hypothetical particles are released into the model atmosphere at a rate of 10 000 per hour at the location of the observation site and transported backward in time for 30 d. It is assumed that when a particle resides in the lowest 0-40 m of the model atmosphere, pollution from ground-based emission sources is added to the air parcel (Arnold et al, 2018;Manning et al, 2011). The particle residence times in this surface layer are integrated over the 30 d simulation to calculate a "footprint" of each measurement that quantifies the sensitivity of the observation to a grid surrounding the measurement site (Manning et al, 2011).…”
Section: Name Simulationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This 14 CO 2 emissions map was created with the highestfrequency data available from each nuclear site. Monthly atmospheric emission data were provided by the two operators of the 10 UK nuclear power plants; EDF (Électricité de France) and Magnox Ltd. Data for the other 17 UK nuclear sites were taken from the annual Radioactivity in Food and the Environment RIFE, 1995-2016(Environment Agency, Natural Resources Wales, 2017. The emissions from other European nuclear power plants were sourced from annual environmental reports if available (France, Germany); otherwise, parameterized emissions were calculated according to Graven and Gruber (2011).…”
Section: Nuclear Correctionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, we could not separate the anthropogenic and biospheric CO 2 signals, nor the role of the different emission sectors. This highlights the need for regular carbon isotopic measurements of CO 2 at the regional network stations, together with measurements of anthropogenic co-emitted species such as CO, NO x , black car-bon and volatile organic compounds (e.g., Lopez et al, 2013;Ammoura et al, 2014Ammoura et al, , 2016. Finally, we show that ancillary data such as local meteorological data and parameters defining the structure of the atmosphere such as the ABL height are very important to understand the observed CO 2 variability.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Large projects developed in Indianapolis (IN-FLUX; http://influx.psu.edu; e.g., Turnbull et al, 2015;Lauvaux et al, 2016), Boston (http://www.bu.edu/today/2013/ the-climate-crisis-measuring-boston-carbon-metabolism/; McKain et al, 2012), Los Angeles (Megacities; http://megacities.jpl.nasa.gov/portal/; e.g., Newman et al, 2013;Verhulst et al, 2017) and, in our case, Paris (CO 2 -MegaParis; http://co2-megaparis.lsce.ipsl.fr; e.g., Xueref-Remy et al, 2012;Lac et al, 2013;Bréon et al, 2015;Ammoura et al, 2016;Staufer et al, 2016). These projects rely on the development of urban atmospheric in situ CO 2 monitoring networks that should ideally include, all along the dominant wind paths, (1) regional stations upwind of the city to characterize the regional background CO 2 dry air mole fraction (i.e., without having the impact of the regional emissions -regional is here defined within a radius of ∼ 100 km around the center of Paris) and (2) regional stations in the city and downwind of it (that will integrate both the background signal and the peri-urban/urban ones).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 93%
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