Close Window

Systematic detection of local CH4 anomalies by combining satellite measurements with high-resolution forecasts

Jerome Barre,  Ecmwf,  jerome.barre@ecmwf.int (Presenter)
Ilse Aben,  SRON Netherlands Institute for Space Research,  i.aben@sron.nl
Anna Agusti-Panareda,  ECMWF,  anna.agusti-panareda@ecmwf.int
Richard Engelen,  ECMWF,  richard.engelen@ecmwf.int

In this study, we present a novel monitoring methodology that combines satellite retrievals and forecasts to detect local CH4 concentration anomalies worldwide. These anomalies are caused by rapidly changing anthropogenic emissions that significantly contribute to the CH4 atmospheric budget and by biases in the satellite retrieval data. The method uses high-resolution (7km×7km) retrievals of total column CH4 from the TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) on board the Sentinel 5 Precursor satellite. Observations are combined with high-resolution CH4 forecasts (9km) produced by the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) to provide departures (observations minus forecasts) at close to the satellite's native resolution at appropriate time. Investigating these departures is an effective way to link satellite measurements and emission inventory data in a quantitative manner. We perform filtering on the departures to remove the synoptic-scale and meso-alpha-scale biases in both forecasts and satellite observations. We then apply a simple classification scheme to the filtered departures to detect anomalies and plumes that are missing (e.g. pipeline or facility leaks), underreported or overreported (e.g. depleted drilling fields) in the CAMS emissions. The classification method also shows some limitations to detect emission anomalies only due to local satellite retrieval biases linked to albedo and scattering issues.

Poster: Poster_Barre__19_25.pdf 

Presentation Type: Poster

Session: 4.2c Observations to quantify hot spots and local/urban emissions

Session Date: Thursday (6/17) 10:00 AM

Close Window