Emissions of gases and particles from the combustion of
fossil fuels and biofuels in Africa are expected to increase
significantly in the near future due to the rapid growth of African
cities and megacities. There is currently no regional emissions
inventory that provides estimates of anthropogenic combustion for the
African continent. This work provides a quantification of the evolution
of African combustion emissions from 2005 to 2030, using a bottom-up
method. This inventory predicts very large increases in black carbon,
organic carbon, CO, NOx, SO2 and
non-methane hydrocarbon emissions if no emission regulations are
implemented. This paper discusses the effectiveness of scenarios
involving certain fuels, specific to Africa in each activity sector and
each region (western, eastern, northern and southern Africa), to reduce
the emissions. The estimated trends in African emissions are consistent
with emissions provided by global inventories, but they display a larger
range of values.
African combustion emissions contributed
significantly to global emissions in 2005. This contribution will
increase more significantly by 2030: organic carbon emissions will for
example make up 50% of the global emissions in 2030. Furthermore, we
show that the magnitude of African anthropogenic emissions could be
similar to African biomass burning emissions around 2030.
Download the full journal article @ Environmental Research Letters
Gridded Anthropogenic OC Emissions in 2030 in Africa |
Download the full journal article @ Environmental Research Letters
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