Australian fire emissions of carbon monoxide estimated by global biomass
burning inventories: variability and observational constraints
Abstract
Australian fires are a primary driver of variability in Australian
atmospheric composition and contribute significantly to regional and
global carbon budgets. However, biomass burning emissions from Australia
remain highly uncertain. In this work, we use surface in situ,
ground-based total column and satellite total column observations to
evaluate the ability of two global models (GEOS-Chem and ACCESS-UKCA)
and three global biomass burning emission inventories (FINN1.5, GFED4s,
and QFED2.4) to simulate carbon monoxide (CO) in the Australian
atmosphere. We find that emissions from northern Australia savanna fires
are substantially lower in FINN1.5 than in the other inventories. Model
simulations driven by FINN1.5 are unable to reproduce either the
magnitude or the variability of observed CO in northern Australia. The
remaining two inventories perform similarly in reproducing the observed
variability, although the larger emissions in QFED2.4 combined with an
existing high bias in the southern hemisphere background lead to large
CO biases. We therefore recommend GFED4s as the best option of the three
for global modelling studies with focus on Australia or the southern
hemisphere. Near fresh fire emissions, the higher resolution ACCESS-UKCA
model is better able to simulate surface CO than GEOS-Chem, while
GEOS-Chem captures more of the observed variability in the total column
and remote surface air measurements. We also show that existing
observations in Australia can only partially constrain global model
estimates of biomass burning. Continuous measurements in fire-prone
parts of Australia are needed, along with updates to global biomass
burning inventories that are validated with Australian data.