Greenhouse gas and short-lived pollutants in the Baltimore, MD and Washington, DC area: Coordinated measurements and models

Russell Dickerson,Xinrong Ren,Anna Karion,Paul Shepson, Phil Stratton, Jiayang Sun, Sahu Sayatan,Hao He, Hannah Daley

crossref(2024)

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摘要
The cities of Baltimore, MD and Washington, DC generate substantial amounts of air pollutants with adverse effects on health and climate, but the magnitude and origins of these contaminants remain uncertain.  The State of Maryland has committed to reducing statewide greenhouse gas emissions by 60% (relative to 2006 levels) by the year 2031. A team of scientists from the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE), the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the University of Maryland, and Stony Brook University have established a coordinated program of measurements and models to quantify and allocate emissions.  These include observations from aircraft, a mobile laboratory, a tower array, and surface monitors as well as Lagrangian and Eulerian models.  Results thus far indicate that methane emissions substantially exceed initial, traditional, bottom-up, inventory data and that leakage from the natural gas delivery system and landfills are major sources.  Urban methane emissions show a strong seasonality, consistent with natural gas usage – the flux in winter was 44% greater than in summer.  Model inversions suggest urban methane emissions in Washington and Baltimore decreased by 4-5%/yr between 2018 and 2021.  Mobile laboratory measurements of GHGs and air pollutants such as black carbon with high temporal and spatial resolution reveal a variety of sources in densely populated urban residential areas related to traffic and industry and with implications for environmental justice.  Analysis of long-term monitoring data with clustering of trajectories identified dominant transport pathways and sources in upwind states that likely contribute in a major way to ambient methane concentrations in the Baltimore/Washington area – these include the Marcellus oil and gas plays in Pennsylvania and West Virginia as well as swine production in North Carolina.  Ongoing and future work includes developing a landfill as a testbed for emissions quantification and control and use of carbon and hydrogen isotopes to partition fossil and biogenic emissions and biogenic losses.  The combination of State, federal, and university resources makes for a powerful tool to tackle air quality and climate problems.   
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