Top-down assessment of the Asian carbon budget since the mid 1990s

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Increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) is the principal driver of anthropogenic climate change. Asia is an important region for the global carbon budget, with 4 of the world's 10 largest national emitters of CO2. Using an ensemble of seven atmospheric inverse systems, we estimated land biosphere fluxes (natural, land-use change and fires) based on atmospheric observations of CO2 concentration. The Asian land biosphere was a net sink of -0.46 (-0.70-0.24) PgC per year (median and range) for 1996-2012 and was mostly located in East Asia, while in South and Southeast Asia the land biosphere was close to carbon neutral. In East Asia, the annual CO2 sink increased between 1996-2001 and 2008-2012 by 0.56 (0.30-0.81) PgC, accounting for ∼35% of the increase in the global land biosphere sink. Uncertainty in the fossil fuel emissions contributes significantly (32%) to the uncertainty in land biosphere sink change. View source
Year

2016

Secondary Title

Nature Communications

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Volume

7

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms10724

Language

Keyword(s)

carbon dioxide, fossil fuel, biosphere, carbon budget, carbon monoxide, carbon sink, climate change, concentration (composition), global perspective, Article, atmosphere, budget, combustion, economic development, fire, human, land use, South Asia, Southeast Asia, uncertainty, Far East

Classification
Form: Journal Article

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