Atmospheric scientists at the Harvard School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences (SEAS) and Nanjing University have produced the first
"bottom-up" estimates of China's carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, for 2005 to 2009, and the first statistically rigorous estimates of the uncertainties surrounding China's CO2 emissions.
The independent estimates, rooted in part in measurements of
pollutants both at the sources and in the air, may be the most accurate
totals to date. The resulting figures offer an unbiased basis on which
China might measure its progress toward its well-publicized CO2 control goals.
The findings were published July 4 in the journal Atmospheric Environment.
"China's emissions of CO2 are of central concern in
efforts to combat global climate change," says lead author Yu Zhao, a
former postdoctoral researcher at Harvard SEAS who is now a professor at
the Nanjing University School of Environment in China. "But despite all
of the attention to China's CO2 emissions, they're less well quantified than most people realize."
Existing estimates for these emissions are calculated "top-down,"
based on annual energy statistics that are released by the Chinese
government. The nation has only once officially estimated its CO2 emissions,
based on national energy statistics from 1994, although it is now
constructing a data system to produce periodic national greenhouse gas
inventories. Non-Chinese organizations, such as the U.S. Department of
Energy and the Netherlands Environment Agency, produce widely cited CO2 estimates for China (among other countries), but these are also based on the national energy data.
A study published last month by a China–U.K.–U.S. team in Nature Climate Change spotlighted a large disparity in estimates of Chinese CO2
emissions when the numbers were based on national energy statistics
versus summed provincial data. To illustrate the contrast, those
researchers had applied a standardized U.N. protocol for estimating the
emissions of any developing country by sector.
The new Harvard–Nanjing study goes deeper, however, constructing a
"bottom-up" emission inventory that is specific to China's energy and
technology mix. It combines the results of Chinese field studies of CO2
emissions from diverse combustion processes with a plant-by-plant data
set for power generation, independent research on transportation and
rural biomass use, and provincial-level energy statistics for the
remaining sectors.
The Harvard-Nanjing team believes provincial energy data to be more
accurate than national statistics because the provincial data have been
empirically tested in peer-reviewed atmospheric studies that compare the
expected emissions of conventional air pollutants to actual
instrumental observations by satellites and ground stations. Provincial
statistics also take into account the large quantities of coal produced
by small, illegal mines.
"There are several different ways to estimate emissions of greenhouse
gases or air pollutants, from those designed to support policy
processes to those made by scientists researching atmospheric transport
and chemistry," explains co-author Chris Nielsen, Executive Director of
the Harvard China Project, which is based at SEAS.
The former methods suit the needs of policy, attributing emissions to
identifiable sources for actionable controls, but the latter are often
more environmentally accurate, according to Nielsen.
"The methods used by atmospheric scientists can be more complete,
incorporating new research on dispersed sources that are poorly
represented in official statistics or weakly targeted by policy—such as
the burning of crop wastes in fields or biofuels in poor, rural homes,"
Nielsen explains. "The data are also more detailed in spatial terms.
This allows a comparison of emission estimates to the pollution levels
measured at the surface, or from space, testing the underlying energy
data in the process."
The new study capitalizes on prior tests and a bottom-up data
framework that has been demonstrated for conventional air pollutants to
produce a more thorough estimate of China's CO2 emissions.
The new study also quantifies the uncertainty of the emission totals,
applying formal statistical methods. For instance, the team found that
the 95% confidence interval for the 2005 CO2 estimate lies
between −9% and +11% of the central value. This relatively wide range
means that measuring China's achievement of its national CO2
control targets may be more difficult—and potentially more
contentious—than generally recognized by Chinese and international
policy actors.
"The levels of uncertainty indicate that Chinese domestic frameworks to set control targets for CO2
emissions at scales larger than individual factories, such as provinces
or sectors, may reflect unwarranted confidence in the measurability and
verifiability of the impacts of policy interventions," says senior
author Michael B. McElroy, Gilbert Butler Professor of Environmental
Studies at SEAS.
"Such levels of uncertainty aren't unique to China among developing
and emerging economies," Zhao cautions. "All have less-developed data
systems than those that have been built up over decades to serve energy
markets and environmental regulation in the United States and other
industrialized countries. It's critical that international agreements to
limit CO2 emissions recognize these differences in national data conditions."
Beyond the policy implications, the availability of accurate estimates of China's CO2
emissions (and the related uncertainties in the data) can improve
scientists' understanding of the global carbon cycle and the physical
processes driving global climate change.
The work was funded by the National Science Foundation
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