Abstract

Abstract. In this study, we present column-averaged dry-air mole fractions of CO2 (XCO2), CH4 (XCH4) and CO (XCO) from a recently established measurement site in Gobabeb, Namibia. Gobabeb is a hyperarid desert site at the sharp transition zone between the sand desert and the gravel plains, offering unique characteristics with respect to surface albedo properties. Measurements started in January 2015 and are performed utilizing a ground-based Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) EM27/SUN spectrometer of the COllaborative Carbon Column Observing Network (COCCON). Gobabeb is the first measurement site observing XCO2 and XCH4 on the African mainland and improves the global coverage of ground-based remote-sensing sites. In order to achieve the high level of precision and accuracy necessary for meaningful greenhouse gas observations, we performed calibration measurements for 8 d between November 2015 and March 2016 with the COCCON reference EM27/SUN spectrometer operated at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. We derived scaling factors for XCO2, XCH4 and XCO with respect to the reference instrument that are close to 1.0. We compare the results obtained in Gobabeb to measurements from the Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON) sites at Réunion Island and Lauder. We choose these TCCON sites because, while 4000 km apart, the instruments at Gobabeb and Réunion Island operate at roughly the same latitude. The Lauder station is the southernmost TCCON station and functions as a background site without a pronounced XCO2 seasonal cycle. We find a good agreement for the absolute Xgas values, apart from an expected XCH4 offset between Gobabeb and Lauder due to significantly different tropopause height, as well as representative intraday variability between TCCON and COCCON. Together with the absence of long-term drifts, this highlights the quality of the COCCON measurements. In the southern hemispheric summer, we observe lower XCO2 values at Gobabeb compared to the TCCON stations, likely due to the influence of the African biosphere. We performed coincident measurements with the Greenhouse Gases Observing Satellite (GOSAT), where GOSAT observed three nearby specific observation points, over the sand desert south of the station, directly over Gobabeb and over the gravel plains to the north. GOSAT H-gain XCO2 and XCH4 agree with the EM27/SUN measurements within the 1σ uncertainty limit. The number of coincident soundings is limited, but we confirm a bias of 1.2–2.6 ppm between GOSAT M-gain and H-gain XCO2 retrievals depending on the target point. This is in agreement with results reported by a previous study and the GOSAT validation team. We also report a bias of 5.9–9.8 ppb between GOSAT M-gain and H-gain XCH4 measurements which is within the range given by the GOSAT validation team. Finally, we use the COCCON measurements to evaluate inversion-optimized CAMS model data. For XCO2, we find high biases of 0.9 ± 0.5 ppm for the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) assimilated product and 1.1 ± 0.6 ppm for the in situ-driven product with R2 > 0.9 in both cases. These biases are comparable to reported offsets between the model and TCCON data. The OCO-2 assimilated model product is able to reproduce the drawdown of XCO2 observed by the COCCON instrument at the beginning of 2017, as opposed to the in situ-optimized product. Also, for XCH4, the observed biases are in line with prior model comparisons with TCCON.

Highlights

  • The concentrations of the most important anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHGs), carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4), have risen to values unprecedented since the beginning of high-frequency observational records (Dlugokencky et al, 2019a, b)

  • After this initial check in December 2014, side-by-side measurements with the reference EM27/SUN and the nearby Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON) instrument were performed on the observation platform of the Institute for Meteorology and Climate Research (IMK-ASF) at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Campus North (CN) near Karlsruhe (49.100◦ N, 8.439◦ E; 133 m a.s.l.)

  • For the whole time series, daily Xair results are stable within 1 %

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Summary

Introduction

The concentrations of the most important anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHGs), carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4), have risen to values unprecedented since the beginning of high-frequency observational records (Dlugokencky et al, 2019a, b). A COCCON spectrometer was used in combination with two TCCON instruments to validate OCO-2 (Jacobs et al, 2020) and study boreal forests (Tu et al, 2020), and Velazco et al (2019) performed a campaign to validate GOSAT in central Australia. Apart from these studies, until now, the major activity of the emerging network was to create the capability of permanent COCCON measurements at remote sites as a supplement to the existing TCCON stations.

Gobabeb site description
Description and history of the COCCON spectrometer operated at Gobabeb
TCCON Réunion Island and Lauder
GOSAT specific target observations
CAMS global CO2 and CH4 atmospheric inversion products
Side-by-side measurements at Karlsruhe
Gobabeb Xgas time series
GOSAT validation
CAMS evaluation
Influence of the African biosphere on the Gobabeb observations
Findings
Conclusions and outlook
Full Text
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