Recent decreases in fossil-fuel emissions of ethane and methane derived from firn air
Open Access
- 10 August 2011
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 476 (7359), 198-201
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature10352
Abstract
Methane and ethane are the most abundant hydrocarbons in the atmosphere and they affect both atmospheric chemistry and climate. Both gases are emitted from fossil fuels and biomass burning, whereas methane (CH4) alone has large sources from wetlands, agriculture, landfills and waste water. Here we use measurements in firn (perennial snowpack) air from Greenland and Antarctica to reconstruct the atmospheric variability of ethane (C2H6) during the twentieth century. Ethane levels rose from early in the century until the 1980s, when the trend reversed, with a period of decline over the next 20 years. We find that this variability was primarily driven by changes in ethane emissions from fossil fuels; these emissions peaked in the 1960s and 1970s at 14–16 teragrams per year (1 Tg = 1012 g) and dropped to 8–10 Tg yr−1 by the turn of the century. The reduction in fossil-fuel sources is probably related to changes in light hydrocarbon emissions associated with petroleum production and use. The ethane-based fossil-fuel emission history is strikingly different from bottom-up estimates of methane emissions from fossil-fuel use1,2, and implies that the fossil-fuel source of methane started to decline in the 1980s and probably caused the late twentieth century slow-down in the growth rate of atmospheric methane3,4.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Correlating tropospheric column ozone with tropopause folds: the Aura-OMI satellite dataAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 2010
- Quantifying errors in trace species transport modelingProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- Renewed growth of atmospheric methaneGeophysical Research Letters, 2008
- Global wildland fire emissions from 1960 to 2000Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 2008
- Law Dome CO2, CH4 and N2O ice core records extended to 2000 years BPGeophysical Research Letters, 2006
- Evidence for variability of atmospheric hydroxyl radicals over the past quarter centuryGeophysical Research Letters, 2005
- A 1°×1° resolution data set of historical anthropogenic trace gas emissions for the period 1890–1990Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 2001
- Emission of trace gases and aerosols from biomass burningGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 2001
- The tropospheric distribution and budget of ethaneJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 1995
- Ethylene economics and production forecasting in a changing environmentEngineering and Process Economics, 1978