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Published July 6, 2018 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Simulating CH_4 and CO_2 over South and East Asia using the zoomed chemistry transport model LMDz-INCA

Abstract

The increasing availability of atmospheric measurements of greenhouse gases (GHGs) from surface stations can improve the retrieval of their fluxes at higher spatial and temporal resolutions by inversions, provided that transport models are able to properly represent the variability of concentrations observed at different stations. South and East Asia (SEA; the study area in this paper including the regions of South Asia and East Asia) is a region with large and very uncertain emissions of carbon dioxide (CO_2) and methane (CH_4), the most potent anthropogenic GHGs. Monitoring networks have expanded greatly during the past decade in this region, which should contribute to reducing uncertainties in estimates of regional GHG budgets. In this study, we simulate concentrations of CH_4 and CO_2 using zoomed versions (abbreviated as ZAs) of the global chemistry transport model LMDz-INCA, which have fine horizontal resolutions of  ∼ 0.66° in longitude and  ∼ 0.51° in latitude over SEA and coarser resolutions elsewhere. The concentrations of CH_4 and CO_2 simulated from ZAs are compared to those from the same model but with standard model grids of 2.50° in longitude and 1.27° in latitude (abbreviated as STs), both prescribed with the same natural and anthropogenic fluxes. Model performance is evaluated for each model version at multi-annual, seasonal, synoptic and diurnal scales, against a unique observation dataset including 39 global and regional stations over SEA and around the world. Results show that ZAs improve the overall representation of CH_4 annual gradients between stations in SEA, with reduction of RMSE by 16–20% compared to STs. The model improvement mainly results from reduction in representation error at finer horizontal resolutions and thus better characterization of the CH_4 concentration gradients related to scattered distributed emission sources. However, the performance of ZAs at a specific station as compared to STs is more sensitive to errors in meteorological forcings and surface fluxes, especially when short-term variabilities or stations close to source regions are examined. This highlights the importance of accurate a priori CH_4 surface fluxes in high-resolution transport modeling and inverse studies, particularly regarding locations and magnitudes of emission hotspots. Model performance for CO_2 suggests that the CO_2 surface fluxes have not been prescribed with sufficient accuracy and resolution, especially the spatiotemporally varying carbon exchange between land surface and atmosphere. In addition, the representation of the CH_4 and CO_2 short-term variabilities is also limited by model's ability to simulate boundary layer mixing and mesoscale transport in complex terrains, emphasizing the need to improve sub-grid physical parameterizations in addition to refinement of model resolutions.

Additional Information

© 2018 Author(s). Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. Received: 27 Nov 2016 – Discussion started: 07 Mar 2017 – Revised: 22 Mar 2018 – Accepted: 24 Apr 2018 – Published: 06 Jul 2018. Data availability: The atmospheric CH_4 and CO_2 observations from global or regional stations are available on the website of the World Data Centre for Greenhouse Gases (WDCGG; https://ds.data.jma.go.jp/gmd/wdcgg/). The simulated 4-D concentration fields of CH_4 and CO_2 are available upon request from Xin Lin (xin.lin@lsce.ipsl.fr). The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest. This study was initiated within the framework of the CaFICA-CEFIPRA project (2809-1). Xin Lin acknowledges PhD funding support from AIRBUS Defense and Space. Philippe Ciais thanks the ERC SyG project IMBALANCE-P "Effects of Phosphorus Limitations on Life, Earth System and Society" (grant agreement no. 610028). Nikolaos Evangeliou acknowledges the Nordic Center of Excellence eSTICC project (eScience Tools for Investigating Climate Change in northern high latitudes) funded by Nordforsk (no. 57001). We acknowledge the WDCGG for providing the archives of surface station observations for CO_2 and CH_4. We thank the following networks or institutes for the efforts on surface GHG measurements and their access: NOAA=ESRL, Aichi, BMKG, CMA, CSIR4PI, CSIRO, Empa, ESSO=NIOT, IIA, IITM, JMA, KMA, LSCE, NIER, NIES, PU and Saitama. We also thank T. Machida from NIES for providing CO_2 measurements from the CONTRAIL project. Finally, we would like to thank F. Marabelle and his team at LSCE as well as the CURIE (TGCC) platform for the computing support.

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Supplemental Material - acp-18-9475-2018-supplement.pdf

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August 19, 2023
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