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A multi-pollutant and multi-sectorial approach to screening the consistency of emission inventories
Some studies show that significant uncertainties affect emission inventories, which may impeach conclusions based on air-quality model results. These uncertainties result from the need to compile a wide variety of information to estimate an emission inventory. In this work, we propose and discuss a...
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Published in: | Geoscientific Model Development 2022-07, Vol.15 (13), p.5271-5286 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Some studies show that significant uncertainties affect
emission inventories, which may impeach conclusions based on air-quality
model results. These uncertainties result from the need to compile a wide
variety of information to estimate an emission inventory. In this work, we
propose and discuss a screening method to compare two emission inventories,
with the overall goal of improving the quality of emission inventories by
feeding back the results of the screening to inventory compilers who can
check the inconsistencies found and, where applicable, resolve errors. The
method targets three different aspects: (1) the total emissions assigned to a
series of large geographical areas, countries in our application; (2) the way
these country total emissions are shared in terms of sector of activity; and
(3) the way inventories spatially distribute emissions from countries to
smaller areas, cities in our application. The first step of the screening
approach consists of sorting the data and keeping only emission contributions
that are relevant enough. In a second step, the method identifies, among
those significant differences, the most important ones that provide evidence of
methodological divergence and/or errors that can be found and resolved in at
least one of the inventories. The approach has been used to compare two
versions of the CAMS-REG European-scale inventory over 150 cities in Europe
for selected activity sectors. Among the 4500 screened pollutant sectors,
about 450 were kept as relevant, among which 46 showed inconsistencies. The
analysis indicated that these inconsistencies arose almost equally
from large-scale reporting and spatial distribution differences. They mostly
affect SO2 and PM coarse emissions from the industrial and residential
sectors. The screening approach is general and can be used for other types
of applications related to emission inventories. |
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ISSN: | 1991-9603 1991-959X 1991-962X 1991-9603 1991-962X 1991-959X |
DOI: | 10.5194/gmd-15-5271-2022 |