Abstract
Atmospheric methane (CH4) concentrations have been rising since 2007, resulting from an imbalance between CH4 sources and sinks. The CH4 budget is generally estimated through top-down approaches using CH4 observations as constraints. The atmospheric isotopic CH4 signal, δ13C(CH4), can also provide additional constraints and helps to discriminate between emission categories. The oxidation by chlorine (Cl) likely contributes less than 5 % to the total oxidation of atmospheric CH4. However, the Cl sink is highly fractionating, and thus strongly influences δ13C(CH4). As inversion studies do not prescribe the same Cl fields to constrain CH4 budget, it can lead to discrepancies between estimates. To quantify the influence of the Cl concentrations on CH4, δ13C(CH4) and CH4 budget estimates, we perform multiple sensitivity simulations using three Cl fields with concentrations that are realistic with regard to recent literature and one Cl field with concentrations that are very likely to be overestimated. We also test removing the tropospheric and the entire Cl sink in other sensitivity simulations. We find that the realistic Cl fields tested here are responsible for between 0.3 % and 1.8 % of the total chemical CH4 sink in the troposphere and between 1.0 % and 1.2 % in the stratosphere. Prescribing these different Cl amounts in surface-based inversions can lead to differences in global CH4 source adjustments of up to 12.3 TgCH4.yr−1. We also find that the globally-averaged isotopic signature of the CH4 sources inferred by a surface-based inversion assimilating δ13C(CH4) observations would decrease by 0.53 ‰ for each additional percent of contribution from the tropospheric Cl sink to the total sink. Finally, our study shows that CH4 seasonal cycle amplitude is modified by less than 1–2 % but δ13(CH4) seasonal cycle amplitude can be modified by up to 10–20 %, depending on the latitude.
Highlights
Methane (CH4) is a very important species for both atmospheric chemistry and climate
We find that the globally-averaged isotopic signature of the CH4 sources inferred by a surface-based inversion assimilating δ 13C(CH4) observations would decrease by 0.53 ‰ for each additional percent of contribution from the tropospheric Cl sink to the total sink
We tested multiple Cl fields suggested by recent studies to investigate the influence of the Cl configuration on CH4 370 and δ 13C(CH4), and to estimate its potential impact on the estimation of CH4 sources and isotopic signatures with top-down approaches
Summary
Methane (CH4) is a very important species for both atmospheric chemistry and climate. Its atmospheric mole fractions have reached an average of 1879 ppb at the surface in 2020 (Dlugokencky, 2021), almost three times higher than pre-industrial 20 mole fractions (Etheridge et al, 1998). After a plateau between 1999 and 2006, CH4 mole fractions resumed their increase in 2007 without showing any sign of stabilization since . Discussion started: 2 December 2021 c Author(s) 2021.
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