Fossil vs. non-fossil CO sources in the US: New airborne constraints
from ACT-America and GEM
Abstract
Carbon monoxide (CO) is an ozone precursor, oxidant sink, and
widely-used pollution tracer. The importance of anthropogenic versus
other CO sources in the US is uncertain. Here we interpret extensive
airborne measurements with an atmospheric model to constrain US fossil
and non-fossil CO sources. Measurements reveal a low bias in the
simulated CO background and a 30% overestimate of US fossil CO
emissions in the 2016 National Emissions Inventory. After optimization
we apply the model for source partitioning. During summer, regional
fossil sources account for just 9-16% of the sampled boundary layer CO,
and 32-38% of the North American enhancement-complicating use of CO as
a fossil fuel tracer. The remainder predominantly reflects biogenic
hydrocarbon oxidation plus fires. Fossil sources account for less
domain-wide spatial variability at this time than non-fossil and
background contributions. The regional fossil contribution rises in
other seasons, and drives ambient variability downwind of urban areas.