4.4 Article

The impact of the COVID-19 lockdown on greenhouse gases: a multi-city analysis of in situ atmospheric observations

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/2515-7620/ac66cb

Keywords

covid-19 lockdown; greenhouse gas; emission reduction; North America; observational metrics

Funding

  1. NIST [70NANB10H245, 70NANB19H130]
  2. NOAA's AC4 program [NA21OAR4310227]
  3. NOAA Grant [NA17OAR4310084, NA17OAR4310086, NA20OAR4310303]
  4. National Institute of Standards and Technology [70NANB10H245]
  5. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [NA13OAR4310076]

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We tested the capabilities of urban greenhouse gas measurement networks to detect abrupt changes in emissions, specifically during the COVID-19 lockdown in March 2020. The results showed a significant decrease in CO2 and CO emissions during the lockdown period, while changes in CH4 emissions were variable and not statistically significant. The study demonstrated the sensitivity of these tower networks to rapid changes in urban emissions, which were mainly influenced by reductions in traffic. Additionally, using measurements at different altitudes in urban observatories could improve the sensitivity of the observational network to both city-scale and local fluxes.
We tested the capabilities of urban greenhouse gas (GHG) measurement networks to detect abrupt changes in emissions, such as those caused by the roughly 6-week COVID-19 lockdown in March 2020 using hourly in situ GHG mole fraction measurements from six North American cities. We compared observed changes in CO2, CO, and CH4 for different mole fraction metrics (diurnal amplitude, vertical gradients, enhancements, within-hour variances, and multi-gas enhancement ratios) during 2020 relative to previous years for three periods: pre-lockdown, lockdown, and ongoing recovery. The networks showed decreases in CO2 and CO metrics during the lockdown period in all cities for all metrics, while changes in the CH4 metrics were variable across cities and not statistically significant. Traffic decreases in 2020 were correlated with the changes in GHG metrics, whereas changes in meteorology and biology were not, implying that decreases in the CO2 and CO metrics were related to reduced emissions from traffic and demonstrating the sensitivity of these tower networks to rapid changes in urban emissions. The enhancements showed signatures of the lockdowns more consistently than the three micrometeorological methods, possibly because the urban measurements are collected at relatively high altitudes to be sensitive to whole-city emissions. This suggests that urban observatories might benefit from a mixture of measurement altitudes to improve observational network sensitivity to both city-scale and more local fluxes.

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