Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2024)
Radiocarbon as a tracer of the fossil fraction of regional carbon monoxide emissions
Abstract
Carbon monoxide (CO) is an atmospheric pollutant with a positive net warming effect on the climate. The magnitude of CO sources and the fraction of fossil vs biogenic sources are still uncertain and vary across emissions inventories. Measurements of radiocarbon ( ^14 C) in CO could potentially be used to investigate the sources of CO on a regional scale because fossil sources lack ^14 C and reduce the ^14 C/C ratio (Δ ^14 C) of atmospheric CO more than biogenic sources. We use regional Lagrangian model simulations to investigate the utility of Δ ^14 CO measurements for estimating the fossil fraction of CO emissions and evaluating bottom-up emissions estimates (United Kingdom Greenhouse Gas, UKGHG, and TNO Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service, TNO) in London, UK. Due to the high Δ ^14 CO in atmospheric CO from cosmogenic production, both fossil and biogenic CO emissions cause large reductions in Δ ^14 CO regionally, with larger reductions for fossil than biogenic CO per ppb added. There is a strong seasonal variation in Δ ^14 CO in background air and in the sensitivity of Δ ^14 CO to fossil and biogenic emissions of CO. In the UK, the CO emissions estimate from TNO has a higher fraction from fossil fuels than UKGHG (72% vs 67%). This results in larger simulated decreases in Δ ^14 C per ppb CO for TNO emissions. The simulated differences between UKGHG and TNO are likely to be easily detectable by current measurement precision, suggesting that Δ ^14 CO measurements could be an effective tool to understand regional CO sources and assess bottom-up emissions estimates.
Keywords