Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/113216
PIRA download icon_1.1View/Download Full Text
Title: The greenhouse gas budget of terrestrial ecosystems in East Asia since 2000
Authors: Wang, X
Gao, Y
Jeong, S
Ito, A
Bastos, A
Poulter, B
Wang, Y
Ciais, P
Tian, H
Yuan, W
Chandra, N
Chevallier, F
Fan, L
Hong, S
Lauerwald, R
Li, W
Lin, Z
Pan, N
Patra, PK
Peng, S
Ran, L
Sang, Y
Sitch, S
Takashi, M
Thompson, RL
Wang, C
Wang, K
Wang, T 
Xi, Y
Xu, L
Yan, Y
Yun, J
Zhang, Y
Zhang, Y
Zhang, Z
Zheng, B
Zhou, F
Tao, S
Canadell, JG
Piao, S
Issue Date: Feb-2024
Source: Global biogeochemical cycles, Feb. 2024, v. 38, no. 2, e2023GB007865
Abstract: East Asia (China, Japan, Koreas, and Mongolia) has been the world's economic engine over at least the past two decades, exhibiting a rapid increase in fossil fuel emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs) and has expressed the recent ambition to achieve climate neutrality by mid-century. However, the GHG balance of its terrestrial ecosystems remains poorly constrained. Here, we present a synthesis of the three most important long-lived greenhouse gases (CO2, CH4, and N2O) budgets over East Asia during the decades of 2000s and 2010s, following a dual constraint approach. We estimate that terrestrial ecosystems in East Asia is close to neutrality of GHGs, with a magnitude of between −46.3 ± 505.9 Tg CO2eq yr−1 (the top-down approach) and −36.1 ± 207.1 Tg CO2eq yr−1 (the bottom-up approach) during 2000–2019. This net GHG sink includes a large land CO2 sink (−1229.3 ± 430.9 Tg CO2 yr−1 based on the top-down approach and −1353.8 ± 158.5 Tg CO2 yr−1 based on the bottom-up approach) being offset by biogenic CH4 and N2O emissions, predominantly coming from the agricultural sectors. Emerging data sources and modeling capacities have helped achieve agreement between the top-down and bottom-up approaches, but sizable uncertainties remain in several flux terms. For example, the reported CO2 flux from land use and land cover change varies from a net source of more than 300 Tg CO2 yr−1 to a net sink of ∼−700 Tg CO2 yr−1. Although terrestrial ecosystems over East Asia is close to GHG neutral currently, curbing agricultural GHG emissions and additional afforestation and forest managements have the potential to transform the terrestrial ecosystems into a net GHG sink, which would help in realizing East Asian countries' ambitions to achieve climate neutrality.
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.
Journal: Global biogeochemical cycles 
ISSN: 0886-6236
EISSN: 1944-9224
DOI: 10.1029/2023GB007865
Rights: © 2024. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
Appears in Collections:Journal/Magazine Article

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Wang_Greenhouse_Gas_Budget.pdf1.49 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
Open Access Information
Status open access
File Version Version of Record
Access
View full-text via PolyU eLinks SFX Query
Show full item record

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.