Abstract. The calculation of the air-water CO 2 exchange (FCO 2 ) in the ocean not only depends on the gradient in CO 2 partial pressure at the air-water interface but also on the parameterization of the gas exchange transfer velocity (k) and the choice of wind product. Here, we present regional and global-scale quantifications of the uncertainty in FCO 2 induced by several widely used k-formulations and 4 wind speed data products (CCMP, ERA, NCEP1 and NCEP2). The analysis is 10 performed at a 1° x 1° resolution using the sea surface pCO 2 climatology generated by Landschützer et al. (2015) that the range of global FCO 2 , calculated with these k-relationships, diverge by 12 % when using CCMP, ERA or NCEP1.Due to differences in the regional wind patterns, regional discrepancies in FCO 2 are more pronounced than global. These global/regional differences significantly increase when using NCEP2 or other k-formulations which include earlier relationships (i.e. Wanninkhof et al., 2009) as well as numerous local/regional parameterizations derived experimentally. To minimize uncertainties associated with the choice of wind product it is possible to recalculate the 20 coefficient c globally (hereafter called c * ) for a given wind product and its spatio-temporal resolution, in order to match the last evaluation of the global k value. We thus performed these recalculations for each wind product at the resolution and time period of our study but the resulting global FCO 2 estimates still diverge by 10 %. These results also reveal that the Equatorial Pacific, the North Atlantic and the Southern Ocean are the regions in which the choice of wind product will most strongly affect the estimation of the FCO 2 , even when using c * . 25