Abstract:
Presently, there is one African regional inventory dealing with biofuel and fossil fuel emissions (Liousse et al.,
2014) and only global emission inventories including Africa. Developing a regional inventory for gases and particles
is not an easy task: the DACCIWA project has allowed to organize a framework suitable for this development
through regrouping several investigators. The aim is to set an African database on fuel consumption and new emission
factor measurements and to include other sources of pollution than biofuel and fossil fuel such as flaring and
waste burning yet not negligible in Africa. The inclusion of these sources in the new inventory and also new emissions
factor measurements will reduce the uncertainties on anthropogenic emissions in Africa.
This work will present the first version of African fossil fuel (FF), biofuel (BF), gas flaring and waste burning
emission inventories for the 1990-2016 period for the major atmospheric compounds (gases and particles) provides
up to date emission fields at 0.125 x 0.125 spatial resolution and yearly temporal resolution that can be
used to model atmospheric composition and impacts over West Africa. New emission factor measurements on
ground and in combustion chambers will be discussed. Temporal variability of emissions from 1990 to 2016 will
be scrutinized.
In parallel, uncertainties on existing biomass burning emission inventories will be presented. New emission inventories
based on MODIS burnt area products and AMMABB methodology have been developed for the period
2000-2012. They will be compared with GFED and GFAS products.
Finally, tests on these inventories in Regional Climate Model (RegCM) at African scale will be presented for
different years.Presently, there is one African regional inventory dealing with biofuel and fossil fuel emissions (Liousse et al.,
2014) and only global emission inventories including Africa. Developing a regional inventory for gases and particles
is not an easy task: the DACCIWA project has allowed to organize a framework suitable for this development
through regrouping several investigators. The aim is to set an African database on fuel consumption and new emission
factor measurements and to include other sources of pollution than biofuel and fossil fuel such as flaring and
waste burning yet not negligible in Africa. The inclusion of these sources in the new inventory and also new emissions
factor measurements will reduce the uncertainties on anthropogenic emissions in Africa.
This work will present the first version of African fossil fuel (FF), biofuel (BF), gas flaring and waste burning
emission inventories for the 1990-2016 period for the major atmospheric compounds (gases and particles) provides
up to date emission fields at 0.125 x 0.125 spatial resolution and yearly temporal resolution that can be
used to model atmospheric composition and impacts over West Africa. New emission factor measurements on
ground and in combustion chambers will be discussed. Temporal variability of emissions from 1990 to 2016 will
be scrutinized.
In parallel, uncertainties on existing biomass burning emission inventories will be presented. New emission inventories
based on MODIS burnt area products and AMMABB methodology have been developed for the period
2000-2012. They will be compared with GFED and GFAS products.
Finally, tests on these inventories in Regional Climate Model (RegCM) at African scale will be presented for
different years.