Total Carbon Column Observing Network

Science Centres: Atmosphere, Environmental Information

Equipment used: 
Fourier Transform Spectrometers

NIWA participates in the Total Carbon Column Observing Network, a ground-based observing network dedicated to making precise and accurate measurements of greenhouse gas concentrations in different parts of the atmosphere.

The Problem

A major challenge in climate science is to understand the fate of the approximately 30 billion tons of carbon dioxide emitted each year as a result of human activities (such as motor vehicles, factories, and deforestation).

Climate scientists need to advance their ability to observe and model concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere to:

  • Make more accurate predictions of future atmospheric composition, and associated effects on the Earth’s climate
  • Estimate anthropogenic (human-induced) emissions of greenhouse gases at regional or national scales to quantify the effectiveness of measures to reduce emissions.

Surface gas measurements can be made very precisely and accurately. But it’s difficult to calculate surface fluxes from these measurements (e.g. to infer carbon emissions) because of atmospheric mixing.

Total column measurements of gases can address this problem because they are relatively insensitive to atmospheric mixing.

  • They calculate the total amount of a particular gas in a virtual column of air extending from the Earth’s surface to the top of the atmosphere.
  • They’re made by remote sensing using Fourier Transform Spectrometers on the ground, or borne by satellite.
  • Recent satellite projects include the Japanese Greenhouse Gases Observing Satellite (GOSAT), launched in January 2009, and the European Space Agency’s SCIAMACHY satellite instrument.

There is particular interest in satellite-based total column greenhouse gas measurements because they offer unprecedented resolution over space and time. In principle, this will enable scientists to estimate surface fluxes - and hence sources and sinks - of greenhouse gases at regional scales (around 1000 square km).

To achieve this, the satellite-based total column measurements must be very precise, and calibrated to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) reference scale for greenhouse gases.

Measurements from the Total Carbon Column Observing Network will:

  • provide the primary validation for the GOSAT measurements and ensure they are calibrated to the WMO reference scale
  • contribute directly to our understanding of the global carbon cycle.

Links

GOSAT project

SCIAMACHY instrument

The Approach

TCCON is a global network (established in 2004) of ground-based solar Fourier Transform Spectrometers (FTS), each placed alongside in situ surface gas analysers. Together, these provide very precise and accurate measurements of the column amounts and surface concentrations of key greenhouse gases:

  • carbon dioxide (CO2)

  • methane (CH4)
  • nitrous oxide (N2O)
  • carbon monoxide (CO)

TCCON will contribute to improved understanding and monitoring of the global carbon cycle and greenhouse gas emissions in two ways:

  • indirectly, through validation of CO2 and CH4 satellite-based total column measurements from GOSAT and SCIAMACHY
  • directly, by using co-located column and surface in situ data to look at how good the mathematical models are at calculating gas concentrations, surface fluxes, and atmospheric mixing.

Ground-based measurements from the Southern Hemisphere TCCON sites will play a key role in validating the GOSAT CO2 and CH4 column measurements. This is because the sites span a range of latitudes and atmospheric variability is low in the Southern Hemisphere.

Calibration by instrumented aircraft overpasses

TCCON has unprecedented requirements for measurement accuracy (lack of bias) and precision (repeatability). To achieve this, TCCON column measurements are being calibrated to the WMO greenhouse gas reference scale [by overpasses of aircraft equipped with in situ gas analysers.  

Calibration of NIWA's Lauder TCCON measurements is undertaken within the framework of the United States National Science Foundation funded HIAPER Pole-to-Pole Observation of Atmospheric Tracers experiment (HIPPO).

Development of TCCON

Routine TCCON measurements began at the TCCON sites in Park Falls (USA) in May 2004 and Lauder (NIWA, NZ) in June 2004, followed by Darwin (Australia) in September 2005. Since then the network has grown rapidly.

In August 2009, NIWA installed a second state-of-the-art FTS at Lauder, dedicated to TCCON measurements.

As of July 2009, the network comprised 14 operational sites in 10 countries. A further four sites are expected to become operational in 2010.

Links

HIAPER Pole-to-Pole Observation of Atmospheric Tracers experiment (HIPPO)

Schematic of TCCON measurements at Lauder

NIWA's Lauder Atmospheric Research Station

Location of TCCON sites worldwide

 

Results to date

 

Since 2004, TCCON partners have identified and corrected significant, systematic measurement biases in the FTS measurements.

 

Instrumented aircraft overpasses of the Park Falls, Darwin, Oklahoma, Tsukuba, and Lauder TCCON sites are enabling us to calibrate the FTS measurements on the WMO reference scale.

TCCON data from Lauder and sites worldwide are being used to validate GOSAT CO2 and CH4 column measurements.

 

In situ and column CH4 measurements at Lauder, in conjunction with other measurements in the southwest Pacific, corroborate changes in the CH4 growth rate observed globally since 2007.

 

A public release of the total column data from Park Falls, Darwin and Lauder will be made in 2009. These data will be used by the carbon cycle modelling and satellite measurement communities.