Abstract

Abstract. Reservoirs are important sources of greenhouse gases (GHGs) to the atmosphere, and their number is rapidly increasing, especially in tropical regions. Accurately predicting their current and future emissions is essential but hindered by fragmented data on the subject, which often fail to include all emission pathways (surface diffusion, ebullition, degassing, and downstream emissions) and the high spatial and temporal flux variability. Here we conducted a comprehensive sampling of Batang Ai reservoir (Malaysia), and compared field-based versus modelled estimates of its annual carbon footprint for each emission pathway. Carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) surface diffusion were higher in upstream reaches. Reducing spatial and temporal sampling resolution resulted in up to a 64 % and 33 % change in the flux estimate, respectively. Most GHGs present in discharged water were degassed at the turbines, and the remainder were gradually emitted along the outflow river, leaving time for CH4 to be partly oxidized to CO2. Overall, the reservoir emitted 2475 gCO2eqm-2yr-1, with 89 % occurring downstream of the dam, mostly in the form of CH4. These emissions, largely underestimated by predictions, are mitigated by CH4 oxidation upstream and downstream of the dam but could have been drastically reduced by slightly raising the water intake elevation depth. CO2 surface diffusion and CH4 ebullition were lower than predicted, whereas modelled CH4 surface diffusion was accurate. Investigating latter discrepancies, we conclude that exploring morphometry, soil type, and stratification patterns as predictors can improve modelling of reservoir GHG emissions at local and global scales.

Highlights

  • Reservoirs provide a variety of services to humans and cover an estimated area exceeding 0.3 million km2 globally (Lehner et al, 2011)

  • The main objective of this study is to provide a comprehensive account of CO2, CH4, and N2O fluxes from surface diffusion, ebullition, degassing, and downstream emissions to better understand what shapes their relative contributions and their potential mitigation

  • Mitigating greenhouse gases (GHGs) emissions from future reservoirs depends on the capacity to predict

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Summary

Introduction

Reservoirs provide a variety of services to humans (water supply, navigation, flood control, hydropower) and cover an estimated area exceeding 0.3 million km globally (Lehner et al, 2011). This area is increasing, with an expected rapid growth of the hydroelectric sector in the two decades (International Hydropower Association (IHA), 2015), mainly in tropical and subtropical regions (Zarfl et al, 2015). The relative contribution of these flux pathways to total emissions is extremely variable. While surface diffusion is the most frequently sampled, it is often not the main emission pathway

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