Tracking 21st century anthropogenic and natural carbon fluxes through model-data integration

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Abstract

Monitoring the implementation of emission commitments under the Paris agreement relies on accurate estimates of terrestrial carbon fluxes. Here, we assimilate a 21st century observation-based time series of woody vegetation carbon densities into a bookkeeping model (BKM). This approach allows us to disentangle the observation-based carbon fluxes by terrestrial woody vegetation into anthropogenic and environmental contributions. Estimated emissions (from land-use and land cover changes) between 2000 and 2019 amount to 1.4 PgC yr−1, reducing the difference to other carbon cycle model estimates by up to 88% compared to previous estimates with the BKM (without the data assimilation). Our estimates suggest that the global woody vegetation carbon sink due to environmental processes (1.5 PgC yr−1) is weaker and more susceptible to interannual variations and extreme events than estimated by state-of-the-art process-based carbon cycle models. These findings highlight the need to advance model-data integration to improve estimates of the terrestrial carbon cycle under the Global Stocktake.

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Bultan, S., Nabel, J. E. M. S., Hartung, K., Ganzenmüller, R., Xu, L., Saatchi, S., & Pongratz, J. (2022). Tracking 21st century anthropogenic and natural carbon fluxes through model-data integration. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-32456-0

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