Enhanced CH4 emissions from global wildfires likely due to undetected small fires

Junri Zhao, Philippe Ciais, Frederic Chevallier, Josep G. Canadell, Ivar R. van der Velde, Emilio Chuvieco, Yang Chen, Qiang Zhang, Kebin He, Bo Zheng

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Monitoring methane (CH4) emissions from terrestrial ecosystems is essential for assessing the relative contributions of natural and anthropogenic factors leading to climate change and shaping global climate goals. Fires are a significant source of atmospheric CH4, with the increasing frequency of megafires amplifying their impact. Global fire emissions exhibit large spatiotemporal variations, making the magnitude and dynamics difficult to characterize accurately. In this study, we reconstruct global fire CH4 emissions by integrating satellite carbon monoxide (CO)-based atmospheric inversion with well-constrained fire CH4 to CO emission ratio maps. Here we show that global fire CH4 emissions averaged 24.0 (17.7-30.4) Tg yr-1 from 2003 to 2020, approximately 27% higher (equivalent to 5.1 Tg yr-1) than average estimates from four widely used fire emission models. This discrepancy likely stems from undetected small fires and underrepresented emission intensities in coarse-resolution data. Our study highlights the value of atmospheric inversion based on fire tracers like CO to track fire-carbon-climate feedback.

Original languageEnglish
Article number804
Pages (from-to)1-9
Number of pages9
JournalNature Communications
Volume16
Early online date18 Jan 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025. The Author(s).

Funding

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 42375096) and the Shenzhen Science and Technology Program (Grant No. ZDSYS20220606100806014).

FundersFunder number
National Natural Science Foundation of China42375096
Science, Technology and Innovation Commission of Shenzhen MunicipalityZDSYS20220606100806014

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