Agricultural ammonia emissions in China: reconciling bottom-up and top-down estimates

Lin Zhang, Youfan Chen, Yuanhong Zhao, Daven K. Henze, Liye Zhu, Yu Song, Fabien Paulot, Xuejun Liu, Yuepeng Pan, Yi Lin, Binxiang Huang
2018 Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics  
<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Current estimates of agricultural ammonia (NH<sub>3</sub>) emissions in China differ by more than a factor of 2, hindering our understanding of their environmental consequences. Here we apply both bottom-up statistical and top-down inversion methods to quantify NH<sub>3</sub> emissions from agriculture in China for the year 2008. We first assimilate satellite observations of NH<sub>3</sub> column concentration from the Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer (TES) using
more » ... the GEOS-Chem adjoint model to optimize Chinese anthropogenic NH<sub>3</sub> emissions at the 1∕2°<span class="thinspace"></span> × <span class="thinspace"></span>2∕3° horizontal resolution for March–October 2008. Optimized emissions show a strong summer peak, with emissions about 50<span class="thinspace"></span>% higher in summer than spring and fall, which is underestimated in current bottom-up NH<sub>3</sub> emission estimates. To reconcile the latter with the top-down results, we revisit the processes of agricultural NH<sub>3</sub> emissions and develop an improved bottom-up inventory of Chinese NH<sub>3</sub> emissions from fertilizer application and livestock waste at the 1∕2°<span class="thinspace"></span> × <span class="thinspace"></span>2∕3° resolution. Our bottom-up emission inventory includes more detailed information on crop-specific fertilizer application practices and better accounts for meteorological modulation of NH<sub>3</sub> emission factors in China. We find that annual anthropogenic NH<sub>3</sub> emissions are 11.7<span class="thinspace"></span>Tg for 2008, with 5.05<span class="thinspace"></span>Tg from fertilizer application and 5.31<span class="thinspace"></span>Tg from livestock waste. The two sources together account for 88<span class="thinspace"></span>% of total anthropogenic NH<sub>3</sub> emissions in China. Our bottom-up emission estimates also show a distinct seasonality peaking in summer, consistent with top-down results from the satellite-based inversion. Further evaluations using surface network measurements show that the model driven by our bottom-up emissions reproduces the observed spatial and seasonal variations of NH<sub>3</sub> gas concentrations and ammonium (NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup>) wet deposition fluxes over China well, providing additional credibility to the improvements we have made to our agricultural NH<sub>3</sub> emission inventory.</p>
doi:10.5194/acp-18-339-2018 fatcat:aprdvsyacbh53hjj4pkmmhc4dq