Publication | Open Access
A 1°×1° resolution data set of historical anthropogenic trace gas emissions for the period 1890–1990
440
Citations
44
References
2001
Year
EngineeringGreenhouse Gas EmissionAir QualityCarbon AccountingIndustrial EmissionPeriod 1890–1990Earth ScienceGreenhouse GasesAtmospheric ScienceN 2Emission FactorsChemical EmissionGreenhouse Gas MeasurementCarbon SequestrationGreenhouse Gas Emission ReductionGeographyEnergy Sector EmissionsEmission DatabaseResolution Data SetEmission ReductionAtmospheric Impact AssessmentGreenhouse Gas Emission MonitoringCarbon EmissionsAir PollutionAgricultural EmissionsEmissions
The dataset can be used for trend studies of tropospheric trace gases and environmental assessments, such as evaluating historical regional contributions to greenhouse gas forcing, acidification, and eutrophication. It was compiled using EDGAR 2.0, calculating country‑ and sector‑level emissions with an emission‑factor approach from 10‑year historical activity statistics and evolving emission factors, supplemented by the Hundred Year Database and additional estimates, and includes energy, industry, agriculture, waste, and biomass‑burning sources. The authors produced a 1°×1° gridded dataset of anthropogenic emissions for CO₂, CO, CH₄, NMVOCs, SO₂, NOₓ, N₂O, and NH₃ spanning 1890 to 1990.
An anthropogenic emissions data set has been constructed for CO 2 , CO, CH 4 , nonmethane volatile organic compounds, SO 2 , NO x , N 2 O, and NH 3 spanning the period 1890–1990. The inventory is based on version 2.0 of the Emission Database for Global Atmospheric Research (EDGAR 2.0). In EDGAR the emissions are calculated per country and economic sector using an emission factor approach. Calculations of the emissions with 10 year intervals are based on historical activity statistics and selected emission factors. Historical activity data were derived from the Hundred Year Database for Integrated Environmental Assessments (1890–1990) supplemented with other data and our own estimates. Emission factors account for changes in economical and technological developments in the past. The calculated emissions on a country basis have been interpolated onto a 1°×1° grid. This consistent data set can be used in trend studies of tropospheric trace gases and in environmental assessments, for example, the analysis of historical contributions of regions and countries to environmental forcing like the enhanced greenhouse gas effect, acidification, and eutrofication. The database focuses on energy/industrial and agricultural/waste sources; for completeness, historical biomass‐burning estimates where added using a simple and transparent approach.
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