3/27/2007
Washington, D.C. — Scientists from NOAA's Earth System Research
Laboratory have announced a new tool to monitor changes in atmospheric
carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases by region and source. The
tool, called CarbonTracker, will enable its users to evaluate the
effectiveness of their efforts to reduce or store carbon emissions.
The online data framework distinguishes between changes in the
natural carbon cycle and those occurring in human-produced fossil fuel
emissions. It also provides verification for scientists using computer
models to project future climate change. Potential users include
corporations, cities, states and nations assessing their efforts to
reduce or store fossil fuel emissions around the world.
“NOAA encourages science that adds benefit to society and the
environment. CarbonTracker does both,” said retired Navy Vice Admiral
Conrad Lautenbacher, Ph.D., undersecretary of commerce for oceans and
atmosphere and NOAA administrator. “Increasingly, observations of the
Earth are demonstrating a remarkable impact on our understanding of
human and natural systems. We are transitioning this understanding
gained from intensive research into operations that benefit the
environment and the economy.”
CarbonTracker distills an accurate assessment of greenhouse-gas
increases or decreases. The resolution will increase to observe
differences in concentration on finer geographical scales over time as
data become available. Using the limited data that currently exist, the
model can characterize emissions each month among U.S. regions, such as
the West or the Southeast. As the observation network becomes denser,
however, policymakers will be able to check the CarbonTracker Web site
to compare emissions from urban centers. For instance, the resolution
will be fine enough to determine the difference in net emissions from
Sacramento as compared to San Francisco.
CarbonTracker’s initial applications are primarily for scientists,
and to attract new partners in NOAA’s efforts to expand greenhouse gas
observations in the United States and globally. NOAA and its partners
are encouraging the addition of new monitoring sites around the United
States and around the world to increase the resolution of point sources.
Ultimately the site will provide easy-to-use information on local scales
for policymakers, business leaders, teachers, and the public.
“CarbonTracker’s potential is enormous,” said Pieter Tans, head of
NOAA/ESRL’s Carbon Cycle Greenhouse Gases group, who developed the tool.
“We are moving into an era where emissions could have a price tag. If
carbon trading, emissions reduction and sequestration schemes become
more common around the globe, society will need the ability to compare
their relative value. Accurate and objective information on changing
atmospheric concentrations will be essential for both research and
impact assessments.”
Until now, scientists have relied on limited direct records of
atmospheric carbon dioxide, mainly from remote locations. Also,
previously available computer models could not maximize the utility of
the information derived. Only analyses of very broad global patterns of
carbon dioxide emissions and uptake were possible. Estimates of local
carbon emissions have used proxy data, such as reported point-source
inventories, gasoline sales records, and other tallies from energy
organizations and nations monitoring greenhouse gases, but there has
been no way to verify what was actually released into the atmosphere.
CarbonTracker uses many more continuous observations than previously
taken. The largest concentration of observations for now is from within
North America. The data are fed into a sophisticated computer model with
135 ecosystems and 11 ocean basins worldwide. The model calculates
carbon release or uptake by oceans, wildfires, fossil fuel combustion,
and the biosphere and transforms the data into a color-coded map of
sources and storage “sinks.” One of the system’s most powerful assets is
its ability to detect natural variations in carbon uptake and release by
oceans and vegetation, which could either aid or counteract societies’
efforts to curb fossil fuel emissions on a seasonal basis.
“Only the atmosphere itself can give us the real answer on all
sources and sinks,” said Wouter Peters, who led the development of
CarbonTracker at NOAA/ESRL and also is affiliated with the Cooperative
Institute for Research in the Environmental Sciences. “This information
will be critical. How atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases
change in the future is one of the key uncertainties in the global
climate models and the biggest driver behind climate change.”
NOAA collaborates with partners in France, Australia, Brazil and
other nations to measure greenhouse gases globally. Through a
longstanding collaboration, Environment Canada has provided a quarter of
the data for North America. However, the global network is still sparse.
Using today’s data, the system can distinguish surface emissions on a
broad scale, but plans are underway to refine observations and modeling
of carbon sources on much smaller scales.
NOAA’s Earth System Research Lab is the only institution measuring
atmospheric greenhouse gases globally and provides more than half of the
world’s data. The network includes individuals gathering air samples in
flasks that are then shipped to the Boulder lab for analysis, aircraft
carrying automated samplers to grab air from higher altitudes, and
sensors atop tall towers transmitting data via telephone.
CarbonTracker is a NOAA contribution to the North American Carbon
Program, a multi-agency effort to quantify, understand, and predict the
continent’s carbon cycle. CIRES is a partnership between NOAA and the
University of Colorado.
SOURCE: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)