Frost, Gregory J.; Middleton, Paulette; Tarrason, Leonor; Granier, Claire; Guenther, Alex; Cardenas, Beatriz; Denier van der Gon, Hugo; Janssens-Maenhout, Greet; Kaiser, Johannes W.; Keating, Terry; Klimont, Zbigniew; Lamarque, Jean-Francois; Liousse, Catherine; Nickovic, Slobodan; Ohara, Toshimasa; Schultz, Martin G.; Skiba, Ute
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8659-6092; van Aardenne, John; Wang, Yuxuan.
2013
New Directions: GEIA's 2020 vision for better air emissions information.
Atmospheric Environment, 81.
710-712.
10.1016/j.atmosenv.2013.08.063
Abstract
We are witnessing a crucial change in how we quantify and understand
emissions of greenhouse gases and air pollutants, with an
increasing demand for science-based transparent emissions information
produced by robust community efforts. Today’s scientific
capabilities, with near-real-time in-situ and remote sensing observations
combined with forward and inverse models and a better
understanding of the controlling processes, are contributing to
this transformation and providing newapproaches to derive, verify,
and forecast emissions (Tong et al., 2011; Frost et al., 2012) and to
quantify their impacts on the environment (e.g., Bond et al.,
2013). At the same time, the needs for emissions information and
the demands for their accuracy and consistency have grown.
Changing economies, demographics, agricultural practices, and energy
sources, along with mandates to evaluate emissions mitigation
efforts, demonstrate compliance with legislation, and verify
treaties, are leading to new challenges in emissions understanding.
To quote NOAA Senior Technical Scientist David Fahey, “We are in
the Century of Accountability. Emissions information is critical
not only for environmental science and decision-making, but also
as an instrument of foreign policy and international diplomacy.”
Emissions quantification represents a key step in explaining
observed variability and trends in atmospheric composition and
in attributing these observed changes to their causes. Accurate
emissions data are necessary to identify feasible controls that
reduce adverse impacts associated with air quality and climate
and to track the success of implemented policies. To progress
further, the international community must improve the understanding
of drivers and contributing factors to emissions, and it
must strengthen connections among and within different scientific
disciplines that characterize our environment and entities that protect
the environment and influence further emissions.
The Global Emissions InitiAtive, GEIA (http://www.geiacenter.
org/), is a center for emissions information exchange and competence
building created in 1990 in response to the need for high
quality global emissions data (Graedel et al., 1993). While the past
two decades have seen considerable progress in developing,
improving and assessing emission estimates, emissions continue
to be a major contributor to overall uncertainty in atmospheric
model simulations. Moving forward, GEIA aims to help build emissions
knowledge in a rapidly evolving society by: 1) enhancing understanding,
quantification, and analysis of emissions processes; 2)
improving access to emissions information; and 3) strengthening
the community of emissions groups involved in research, assessment,
operations, regulation and policy.
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Programmes:
CEH Science Areas 2013- > Biosphere-Atmosphere Interactions
CEH Programmes 2012 > Biogeochemistry
CEH Programmes 2012 > Biogeochemistry
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