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1 Oceanic sources and sinks for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution Nicolas Gruber 1 , Sara Mikaloff Fletcher 2 , and Kay Steinkamp 1 1 Environmental Physics, ETH Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland. 2 NIWA, Wellington, New Zealand. RECCAP Meeting October 6, 2010

Oceanic sources and sinks for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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RECCAP Meeting October 6, 2010. Oceanic sources and sinks for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution. Nicolas Gruber 1 , Sara Mikaloff Fletcher 2 , and Kay Steinkamp 1 1 Environmental Physics, ETH Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

1

Oceanic sources and sinks

for atmospheric CO2

The Ocean Inversion Contribution

Nicolas Gruber1, Sara Mikaloff Fletcher2,

and Kay Steinkamp1

1 Environmental Physics, ETH Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland.2 NIWA, Wellington, New Zealand.

RECCAP Meeting October 6, 2010

Page 2: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

2

Air-sea CO2 fluxes from the ocean inversion (2000)

Gruber et al. (2009)

AIR-SEA FLUXES

CONTEMPORARY FLUXES (mol m-2 yr-1)

ANTHROPOGENIC FLUXES (mol m-2 yr-1) NATURAL (PI) FLUXES (mol m-2 yr-1)

2000

Page 3: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

3 Gruber et al. (2009)

AIR-SEA FLUXES

Global uptake of anthropogenic CO2: 2.2 Pg C yr-1

Air-sea CO2 fluxes from the ocean inversion

Page 4: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

4 Gruber et al. (2009)

AIR-SEA FLUXES

The importance of lateral transport

Page 5: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

5 Gruber et al. (2009)

AIR-SEA FLUXES

The importance of lateral transport

storage

flux

transport

storage

flux

transport

Page 6: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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How were these air-sea fluxes estimated?

Gruber et al. (2009)

Using classical Green’s function inverse methods, one can infer the surface sources and sinks of anthropogenic and natural CO2

from their ocean interior distribution.

“Natural” carbon, i.e. ∆Cgasex Anthropogenic carbon

AIR-SEA FLUXES

Page 7: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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Uncertainty estimate provided by range of model resultsAIR-SEA FLUXES

Estimates come with formal uncertainty estimates, mostly stemming from the spread of ocean models

Gruber et al. (2009)

Page 8: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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Air-sea fluxes (and transports) from ocean inversionSUMMARY

contact: [email protected]

STRENGTHS LIMITS

Independent data-based estimate (independent of pCO2 data and gas-exchange coefficient)

Formal uncertainty estimates (including co-variances and estimates for individual models)

Attribution to natural and anthropogenic fluxes (for 1995, 2000, 2005)

Only annual mean fluxes (no monthly estimates )

Error stems from a combination of data and ocean transport uncertainties

Permits to estimate fluxes, storage, and lateral transport (for natural, anthropogenic, and contemporary carbon)

Page 9: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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Access to the dataACCESS

contact: [email protected]

PATH

http://lgmacweb.env.uea.ac.uk/lequere/recc

CONTENT

go to ETH folder

readme_eth.txt

fluxes_covariances_OIP_1995-2000-2005.mat

gridded_results_OIP_1995-2000-2005.nc

Page 10: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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JOINT INVERSION

ADD-ON: Joint-atmosphere-ocean inversion

Substantial shift in mean flux for tropical and southern land regions

Page 11: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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The End.

Page 12: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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Convergence of air-sea CO2 flux estimates

Gruber et al. (2009)

AIR-SEA FLUXES

A remarkable agreement is found, with the exception of the regions south of 44°S.

Annual fluxes (nominal year of 2000)

Page 13: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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Comparison of ocean inverse estimates with Takahashi climatologies

Gruber et al. (2009)

With the exception of the Southern Ocean, each subsequent edition of the Takahashi et al. climatology became more consistent with the results

of the ocean inversion.

AIR-SEA FLUXES

Page 14: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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Comparison of ocean inverse estimates with TransCOM

Gruber et al. (2009)

Moving from L1 to L3, TransCOMs estimates became more consistent with those from the ocean inversion

AIR-SEA FLUXES

Page 15: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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Ocean Inversion Method

The ocean is divided into 30 regions

Mikaloff Fletcher et al. (2006, 2007)

AIR-SEA FLUXES

Page 16: Oceanic sources and sinks                  for atmospheric CO 2 The Ocean Inversion Contribution

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• Basis functions are model simulated footprints of unit emissions from a number of fixed regions

• Estimate linear combination of basis functions that fits observations in a least squares sense.

Inversion is analogous to linear regression

footprints fluxes obs

Premultiply both sides by inverse of A

estimated fluxes

Inversion of ocean interior observations using a Green’s function approach

AIR-SEA FLUXES