For the first time, researchers have spotted short-term, regional fluctuations in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) across the globe due to emissions from human activities.
Using a combination of NASA satellites and
atmospheric modeling, the scientists performed a first-of-its-kind detection of
human CO2 emissions changes. The new study uses data from NASA’s Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) to measure drops in CO2 emissions during
the COVID-19 pandemic from space. With daily and monthly data products now available to the public, this
opens new possibilities for tracking the collective effects of human activities
on CO2 concentrations in near real-time.
Previous studies investigated the effects of lockdowns early in the pandemic and
found that global CO2 levels dropped slightly in 2020. However, by combining
OCO-2’s high-resolution data with modeling and data analysis tools from NASA’s Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS), the team was able to narrow down which monthly
changes were due to human activity and which were due to natural causes at a
regional scale. This confirms previous estimates based on economic and human
activity data.
The team’s measurements showed that in the
Northern Hemisphere, human-generated growth in CO2 concentrations dropped from
February through May 2020 and rebounded during the summer, consistent with a
global emissions decrease of 3% to 13% for the year.
The results represent a leap forward for
researchers studying regional effects of climate change and tracking results of
mitigation strategies, the team said. The method allows detection of changes in
atmospheric CO2 just a month or two after they happen, providing fast,
actionable information about how human and natural emissions are evolving.
The COVID-19-related lockdowns granted scientists an unexpected and detailed glimpse as to how human activities impact atmospheric composition. Two recent studies, one focusing on nitrogen oxide and the other examining CO2 concentrations, were able to detect the atmospheric ‘fingerprint’ of the lockdowns in unprecedented detail. Credits: NASA / Katie Jepson NASA Tracks COVID-19’s Atmospheric Fingerprint
Discerning subtle changes in Earth’s atmosphere
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a
greenhouse gas present in the atmosphere and its concentration changes due to
natural processes like respiration from plants, exchange with the world’s
oceans, and human activities like fossil fuel combustion and deforestation.
Since the Industrial Revolution, the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere has
increased nearly 49%, passing 400 parts per
million for the first time in human history in 2013.
When governments asked citizens to stay home early in the COVID-19
pandemic, fewer cars on the road meant steep drops in the amount of greenhouse
gases and pollutants released into the atmosphere. But with CO2, a “steep drop”
needs to be put in context, said Lesley Ott, a research
meteorologist at NASA’s Global Modeling and Assimilation Office at Goddard Space
Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. This gas can last in the atmosphere for
up to a century after it is released, which is why short-term changes could get
lost in the overall global carbon cycle – a sequence of absorption and release
that involves natural processes as well as human ones. The lockdowns of early
2020 are one small part of the total CO2 picture for the year.
“Early in 2020, we saw fires in Australia that released CO2, we saw more
uptake from plants over India, and we saw all these different influences mixed
up,” Ott said. “The challenge is to try to disentangle that and understand what
all the different components were.”
Up until recently, measuring these kinds of changes wasn’t possible with
satellite technology. NASA’s OCO-2 satellite has high-precision spectrometers
designed to pick up even smaller fluctuations in CO2, and combined with the
comprehensive GEOS Earth system model, were a perfect fit to spot the
pandemic-related changes.
“OCO-2 wasn’t designed for monitoring emissions, but it is designed to see
even smaller signals than what we saw with COVID,” said lead author Brad Weir, a research scientist
at Goddard and Morgan State University. Weir explained that one of the OCO-2
mission research goals was to track how human emissions shifted in response to
climate policies, which are expected to produce small, gradual changes in CO2.
“We hoped that this measurement system would be able to detect a huge
disruption like COVID.”
The team compared the measured changes in atmospheric CO2 with independent
estimates of emissions changes due to lockdowns. In addition to confirming
those other estimates, the agreement between emissions models and atmospheric
CO2 measurements provides strong evidence that the reductions were due to human
activities.
GEOS contributed important information on wind patterns and other natural
weather fluctuations affecting CO2 emission and transport. “This study really
is bringing everything together to attack an enormously difficult problem,” Ott
said.
Taking a closer look at greenhouse gases
The team’s results showed that growth in CO2 concentrations dropped in the
Northern Hemisphere from February through May 2020 (corresponding to a global
emissions decrease of 3% and 13%), which agreed with computer simulations of
how activity restrictions and natural influences should affect the atmosphere.
The signal wasn’t as clear in the Southern Hemisphere, thanks to another
record-breaking climate anomaly: The Indian Ocean Dipole, or IOD. The IOD is a
cyclical pattern of cooler-than-normal oceans in Southeast Asia and
warmer-than-normal oceans in the eastern Indian Ocean (“positive” phase) or the
reverse (“negative” phase). In late 2019 and early 2020, the IOD experienced an
intense positive phase, yielding a plentiful
harvest season in sub-Saharan Africa and contributing to the
record-setting Australian fire season. Both events strongly
affected the carbon cycle and made detecting the signal of COVID lockdowns
difficult, the team said – but also demonstrated GEOS/OCO-2’s potential for
tracking natural CO2 fluctuations in the future.
GEOS/OCO-2 data power one of the indicators in the COVID-19 Earth Observing Dashboard, a partnership between
NASA, the European Space Agency, and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.
The dashboard compiles global data and indicators to track how lockdowns,
dramatic reductions in transportation, and other COVID-related actions are
affecting Earth’s ecosystems.
The GEOS-OCO-2 assimilated product is available for free download, making
it accessible to researchers and students who want to investigate further.
“Scientists can go to this dashboard and say, ‘I see something interesting
in the CO2 signal; what could that be?’” said Ott. “There’s all kinds of things
we haven’t gotten into in these data sets, and I think it helps people explore
in a new way.”
In the future, the new assimilation and analysis method could also be used
to help monitor results of climate mitigation programs and policies, especially
at the community or regional level, the team said.
“Having the capability to monitor how our climate is changing, knowing this technology is ready to go, is something we’re really proud of,” Ott said.
By Jessica Merzdorf Evans
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD
Source: NASA
Science Enables Detection of Reduced Human CO2 Emissions | NASA
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