https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_monitoring
Carbon monitoring refers to tracking how much carbon dioxide or methane is produced by particular activity at a particular point in time. For example, it may refer to tracking methane emissions from agriculture, or carbon dioxide emissions from land use changes, such as deforestation, or from burning fossil fuels, whether in a power plant, automobile, or other device. Because carbon dioxide is the greenhouse gas emitted in the largest quantities, and methane is an even more potent greenhouse gas, monitoring carbon emissions is widely seen as crucial to any effort to reduce emissions and thereby slow climate change. Monitoring carbon emissions is key to the cap-and-trade program currently being used in Europe, as well as the one in California, and will be necessary for any such program in the future, like the Paris Agreement. The lack of reliable sources of consistent data on carbon emissions is a significant barrier to efforts to reduce emissions.
Carbon monitoring refers to tracking how much carbon dioxide or methane is produced by particular activity at a particular point in time. For example, it may refer to tracking methane emissions from agriculture, or carbon dioxide emissions from land use changes, such as deforestation, or from burning fossil fuels, whether in a power plant, automobile, or other device. Because carbon dioxide is the greenhouse gas emitted in the largest quantities, and methane is an even more potent greenhouse gas, monitoring carbon emissions is widely seen as crucial to any effort to reduce emissions and thereby slow climate change. Monitoring carbon emissions is key to the cap-and-trade program currently being used in Europe, as well as the one in California, and will be necessary for any such program in the future, like the Paris Agreement. The lack of reliable sources of consistent data on carbon emissions is a significant barrier to efforts to reduce emissions.
Data sources
Sources of such emissions data include:
Carbon Monitoring for Action (CARMA)
– An online database provided by the Center for Global Development,
that includes plant-level emissions for more than 50,000 power plants
and 4,000 power companies around the world, as well as the total
emissions from power generation of countries, provinces (or states), and
localities. Carbon emissions from power generation account for about 25
percent of global CO
2 emissions.
2 emissions.
ETSWAP
- An emissions monitoring and reporting system currently in use in the
UK and Ireland, which enables relevant organizations to monitor, verify
and report carbon emissions, as is required by the EU ETS (European Union Emissions Trading Scheme).
FMS - A system used in Germany to record and calculate annual emission reports for plant operators subject to the EU ETS.
In the United States
Almost
all climate change regulations in the US have stipulations to reduce
carbon dioxide and methane emissions by economic sector, so being able
to accurately monitor and assess these emissions is crucial to being
able to assess compliance with these regulations.
Emissions estimates at the national level have been shown to be fairly
accurate, but at the state level there is still much uncertainty.
As part of the Paris Agreement, the US pledged to "decrease its GHG
emissions by 26–28 % relative to 2005 levels by 2025 as part of the
Paris Agreement negotiated at COP21. To comply with these regulations, it is necessary to quantify emissions from specific source sectors.
A source sector is a sector of the economy that emits a particular
greenhouse gas, i.e. methane emissions from the oil and gas industry,
which the US has pledged to decrease by 40–45 % relative to 2012 levels
by 2025 as a more specific action towards achieving its Paris Agreement contribution.
Currently, most governments, including the US government,
estimate carbon emissions with a "bottom-up" approach, using emission
factors which give the rate of carbon emissions per unit of a certain
activity, and data on how much of that activity has taken place.
For example an emission factor can be determined for the amount of
carbon dioxide emitted per gallon of gasoline burned, and this can be
combined with data on gasoline sales to get an estimate of carbon
emissions from light duty vehicles.
Other examples include determining the number of cows in various
locations, or the mass of coal burned at power plants, and combining
these data with the appropriate emissions factors to estimate methane or
carbon dioxide emissions. Sometimes "top-down" methods are used to
monitor carbon emissions. These involve measuring the concentration of a
greenhouse gas in the atmosphere and using these measurements to
determine the distribution of emissions which caused the resulting
concentrations.
Accounting by sector can be complicated when there is a chance of
double counting. For example, when coal is gasified to produce
synthetic natural gas, which is then mixed with natural gas and burned
at a natural gas powered power plant, if accounted for as part of the
natural gas sector, this activity must be subtracted from the coal
sector and added to the natural gas sector in order to be properly
accounted for.
NASA Carbon Monitoring System (CMS)
NASA Carbon Monitoring System (CMS) is a climate research program
created by a congressional order in 2010 that provides grants of about
$500,000 a year for climate research that measure carbon dioxide and
methane emissions.
Using instruments in satellites and airplanes CMS funded research
projects provide data to the United States and other countries that help
track progress of individual nations regarding their Paris climate
emission cuts agreements. For example, CMS projects measured carbon
emissions from deforestation and forest degradation. CMS "stitch-ed] together observations of sources and sinks into high-resolution models of the planet's flows of carbon." The 2019 federal budget specifically assured funding for CMS, after President Trump ended funding in April, 2018.
In the European Union
As part of the European Union Emission Trading Scheme (EU-ETS),
carbon monitoring is necessary in order to ensure compliance with the
cap-and-trade program. This carbon monitoring program has three main
components: atmospheric carbon dioxide measurements, bottom-up carbon
dioxide emissions maps, and an operational data-assimilation system to
synthesize the information from the first two components.
The top-down, atmospheric measurement approach involves satellite
data and in-situ measurements of carbon dioxide concentrations, as well
as atmospheric models that model atmospheric transport of carbon
dioxide. These have limited ability to determine carbon dioxide
emissions at highly resolved spatial scales and can typically not
represent finer scales than a 1 km grid. The models also must resolve
the fluxes of carbon dioxide from anthropogenic sources like fossil fuel
burning, and from natural interactions like terrestrial ecosystems and
the ocean. Due to the complexities and limitations of the top-down approach, the EU combines this method with a bottom-up approach.
The current bottom-up data are based on information that is
self-reported by emitters in the trading scheme. However, the EU is
trying to improve this information source and has proposed plans for
improved bottom-up emissions maps, which will have greatly improved
spatial resolution and near real-time updates.
An operational data system to combine the information gathered
from the two aforementioned sources is also planned. The EU hopes that
by the 2030s, this will be operational and enable a highly sophisticated
carbon monitoring program across the European Union.
Satellites
Satellites
can be used to monitor carbon dioxide concentrations from outer space,
and have been shown to be as accurate as Earth-based measurement
systems.
NASA currently operates a satellite named the Orbiting Carbon
Observatory-2 (OCO-2), and Japan operates their own satellite, the
Greenhouse Gases Observing Satellite (GOSAT).
These satellites can provide valuable information to fill in data gaps
from emission inventories. The OCO-2 measured a strong flux of carbon
dioxide over the Middle East, which had not been represented in
emissions inventories, indicating that important sources were being
neglected in bottom-up estimates of emissions.
These satellites currently both have an error of only 0.5% in the
measurements, but the American and Japanese teams hope to bring that
error down to 0.25%. China recently launched their own satellite to
monitor greenhouse gas concentrations on Earth, the TanSat, in December
2016. It currently has a three-year mission planned and will take readings of carbon dioxide concentrations every 16 days.