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Inverse modeling of 2010–2022 satellite observations shows that inundation of the wet tropics drove the 2020–2022 methane surge

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posted on 2024-10-15, 08:22 authored by Zhen Qu, Daniel J Jacob, A Anthony Bloom, John R Worden, Robert J Parker, Hartmut Boesch
Atmospheric methane concentrations rose rapidly over the past decade and surged in 2020–2022 but the causes have been unclear. We find from inverse analysis of GOSAT satellite observations that emissions from the wet tropics drove the 2010–2019 increase and the subsequent 2020–2022 surge, while emissions from northern mid-latitudes decreased. The 2020–2022 surge is principally contributed by emissions in Equatorial Asia (43%) and Africa (30%). Wetlands are the major drivers of the 2020–2022 emission increases in Africa and Equatorial Asia because of tropical inundation associated with La Niña conditions, consistent with trends in the GRACE terrestrial water storage data. In contrast, emissions from major anthropogenic emitters such as the United States, Russia, and China are relatively flat over 2010–2022. Concentrations of tropospheric OH (the main methane sink) show no long-term trend over 2010–2022 but a decrease over 2020–2022 that contributed to the methane surge.

Funding

NASA Early Career Investigator Program (80NSSC24K1049)

TerraFIRMA: Future Impacts Risks and Mitigation Actions

Natural Environment Research Council

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Natural Environment Research Council (NE/X019071/1)

Copernicus C3S (Grant no. C3S2_312a_Lot2)

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering/Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Volume

121

Issue

40

Pagination

e2402730121

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

issn

0027-8424

eissn

1091-6490

Acceptance date

2024-08-15

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-10-15

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Robert Parker

Deposit date

2024-10-11

Data Access Statement

The GOSAT methane retrieval is available at https://www.leos.le.ac.uk/data/GHG/GOSAT/v9.0/CH4_GOS_OCPR_v9.0_final_nceo_2009_2022.tar.gz (83). The GRACE and GRACE/FO Mascon data (version RL06.2) product was downloaded from http://www2.csr.utexas.edu/grace (93). All data are available in the main text or the supplementary materials.

Rights Retention Statement

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