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Vast CO2 release from Australian fires in 2019–2020 constrained by satellite

Authors :
Guido R. van der Werf
Ruud W. M. Hoogeveen
Tobias Borsdorff
Richard van Hees
Jochen Landgraf
Joannes D. Maasakkers
Ilse Aben
Tim A. van Kempen
Sander Houweling
J. Pepijn Veefkind
Ivar R. van der Velde
Paul J. J. Tol
Earth and Climate
Earth Sciences
Atoms, Molecules, Lasers
LaserLaB - Physics of Light
Amsterdam Sustainability Institute
Source :
Nature, 597(7876), 366-369. Nature Publishing Group, van der Velde, I R, van der Werf, G R, Houweling, S, Maasakkers, J D, Borsdorff, T, Landgraf, J, Tol, P, van Kempen, T A, van Hees, R, Hoogeveen, R, Veefkind, J P & Aben, I 2021, ' Vast CO 2 release from Australian fires in 2019–2020 constrained by satellite ', Nature, vol. 597, no. 7876, pp. 366-369 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03712-y
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Southeast Australia experienced intensive and geographically extensive wildfires during the 2019–2020 summer season1,2. The fires released substantial amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere3. However, existing emission estimates based on fire inventories are uncertain4, and vary by up to a factor of four for this event. Here we constrain emission estimates with the help of satellite observations of carbon monoxide5, an analytical Bayesian inversion6 and observed ratios between emitted carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide7. We estimate emissions of carbon dioxide to be 715 teragrams (range 517–867) from November 2019 to January 2020. This is more than twice the estimate derived by five different fire inventories8–12, and broadly consistent with estimates based on a bottom-up bootstrap analysis of this fire episode13. Although fires occur regularly in the savannas in northern Australia, the recent episodes were extremely large in scale and intensity, burning unusually large areas of eucalyptus forest in the southeast13. The fires were driven partly by climate change14,15, making better-constrained emission estimates particularly important. This is because the build-up of atmospheric carbon dioxide may become increasingly dependent on fire-driven climate–carbon feedbacks, as highlighted by this event16. The amount of carbon dioxide released by the Australian wildfires of 2019–2020 is uncertain, but is estimated here using satellite observations of carbon monoxide to be more than twice the amount suggested by fire inventories.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature, 597(7876), 366-369. Nature Publishing Group, van der Velde, I R, van der Werf, G R, Houweling, S, Maasakkers, J D, Borsdorff, T, Landgraf, J, Tol, P, van Kempen, T A, van Hees, R, Hoogeveen, R, Veefkind, J P & Aben, I 2021, ' Vast CO 2 release from Australian fires in 2019–2020 constrained by satellite ', Nature, vol. 597, no. 7876, pp. 366-369 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03712-y
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5e9a77e8d8fc841e89e085aec290950f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03712-y