MENU

Acceleration of global N2O emissions seen from two decades of atmospheric inversion

Thompson, R. L.; Lassaletta, L.; Patra, P. K.; Wilson, C.; Wells, K. C.; Gressent, A.; Koffi, E. N.; Chipperfield, M. P.; Winiwarter, W.; Davidson, E. A.; Tian, H.; Canadell, J. G.

NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
2019
VL / 9 - BP / 993 - EP / +
abstract
Nitrous oxide (N2O) is the third most important long-lived GHG and an important stratospheric ozone depleting substance. Agricultural practices and the use of N-fertilizers have greatly enhanced emissions of N2O. Here, we present estimates of N2O emissions determined from three global atmospheric inversion frameworks during the period 1998-2016. We find that global N2O emissions increased substantially from 2009 and at a faster rate than estimated by the IPCC emission factor approach. The regions of East Asia and South America made the largest contributions to the global increase. From the inversion-based emissions, we estimate a global emission factor of 2.3 +/- 0.6%, which is significantly larger than the IPCC Tier-1 default for combined direct and indirect emissions of 1.375%. The larger emission factor and accelerating emission increase found from the inversions suggest that N2O emission may have a nonlinear response at global and regional scales with high levels of N-input.

AccesS level

Green accepted, Green published

MENTIONS DATA