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Dive into the research topics where C. Lunder is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Lunder.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Reconciling reported and unreported HFC emissions with atmospheric observations

Mark F. Lunt; Matthew Rigby; Anita L. Ganesan; Alistair J. Manning; Ronald G. Prinn; S. O’Doherty; Jens Mühle; Christina M. Harth; P. K. Salameh; Tim Arnold; Ray F. Weiss; Takuya Saito; Yoko Yokouchi; P. B. Krummel; L. Paul Steele; P. J. Fraser; Shanlan Li; Sunyoung Park; Stefan Reimann; Martin K. Vollmer; C. Lunder; Ove Hermansen; Norbert Schmidbauer; Michela Maione; Jgor Arduini; Dickon Young; Peter G. Simmonds

Significance Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) are among the atmosphere’s fastest growing, and most potent, greenhouse gases. Proposals have been made to phase down their use over the coming decades. Such initiatives may largely be informed by existing emissions inventories, which, we show, are the subject of significant uncertainty. In this work, we use atmospheric models and measurements to examine the accuracy of these inventories for five major HFCs. We show that, when aggregated together, reported emissions of these HFCs from developed countries are consistent with the atmospheric measurements, and almost half of global emissions now originate from nonreporting countries. However, the agreement between our results and the inventory breaks down for individual HFC emissions, suggesting inaccuracies in the reporting methods for individual compounds. We infer global and regional emissions of five of the most abundant hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) using atmospheric measurements from the Advanced Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment and the National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan, networks. We find that the total CO2-equivalent emissions of the five HFCs from countries that are required to provide detailed, annual reports to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) increased from 198 (175–221) Tg-CO2-eq⋅y–1 in 2007 to 275 (246–304) Tg-CO2-eq⋅y–1 in 2012. These global warming potential-weighted aggregated emissions agree well with those reported to the UNFCCC throughout this period and indicate that the gap between reported emissions and global HFC emissions derived from atmospheric trends is almost entirely due to emissions from nonreporting countries. However, our measurement-based estimates of individual HFC species suggest that emissions, from reporting countries, of the most abundant HFC, HFC-134a, were only 79% (63–95%) of the UNFCCC inventory total, while other HFC emissions were significantly greater than the reported values. These results suggest that there are inaccuracies in the reporting methods for individual HFCs, which appear to cancel when aggregated together.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Growth in stratospheric chlorine from short‐lived chemicals not controlled by the Montreal Protocol

R. Hossaini; M. P. Chipperfield; Alfonso Saiz-Lopez; Jeremy J. Harrison; R. von Glasow; Roberto Sommariva; E. Atlas; Maria A. Navarro; Stephen A. Montzka; W. Feng; S. Dhomse; Christina M. Harth; Jens Mühle; C. Lunder; Simon O'Doherty; Dickon Young; S. Reimann; Martin K. Vollmer; P. B. Krummel; Peter F. Bernath

Abstract We have developed a chemical mechanism describing the tropospheric degradation of chlorine containing very short‐lived substances (VSLS). The scheme was included in a global atmospheric model and used to quantify the stratospheric injection of chlorine from anthropogenic VSLS ( ClyVSLS) between 2005 and 2013. By constraining the model with surface measurements of chloroform (CHCl3), dichloromethane (CH2Cl2), tetrachloroethene (C2Cl4), trichloroethene (C2HCl3), and 1,2‐dichloroethane (CH2ClCH2Cl), we infer a 2013 ClyVSLS mixing ratio of 123 parts per trillion (ppt). Stratospheric injection of source gases dominates this supply, accounting for ∼83% of the total. The remainder comes from VSLS‐derived organic products, phosgene (COCl2, 7%) and formyl chloride (CHClO, 2%), and also hydrogen chloride (HCl, 8%). Stratospheric ClyVSLS increased by ∼52% between 2005 and 2013, with a mean growth rate of 3.7 ppt Cl/yr. This increase is due to recent and ongoing growth in anthropogenic CH2Cl2—the most abundant chlorinated VSLS not controlled by the Montreal Protocol.


Polar Research | 2009

Atmospheric monitoring at the Norwegian Antarctic station Troll: measurement programme and first results

Georg Hansen; Katrine Aspmo; Torunn Berg; Kåre Edvardsen; Mmarkus Fiebig; Roland Kallenborn; Terje Krognes; C. Lunder; Kersten Stebel; Norbert Schmidbauer; Sverre Solberg; Karl Espen Yttri

The Troll Atmospheric Station in Antarctica (72°01′S, 2°32′E, 1309 m a.s.l.) was established and put into operation in early 2007. The main foci of the measurement programme are pollution and aerosols in the transition zone between the coastal zone and the inland ice plateau, complementing existing observation programmes along the Antarctic coast and on the Antarctic Plateau. After one year of operation, the monitoring programme is fully operative, and a comprehensive set of data is being analysed. As far as comparable data are available, there is satisfactory agreement between previous and new data. Both aerosol data and measurements of pollution indicate the episodic influence of coastal air masses throughout the year. Background values of medium long-lived pollutants such as CO, O3 and Hg are up to 50% lower than at corresponding Arctic sites (depending on the season), but are still significant. Total ozone and UV doses manifest the recurring Antarctic stratospheric ozone hole, which was moderately severe, but very persistent in 2007. Specific episodes of elevated aerosol concentration and mercury activation are currently under detailed investigation, and will be published separately.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Atmospheric histories and global emissions of halons H‐1211 (CBrClF2), H‐1301 (CBrF3), and H‐2402 (CBrF2CBrF2)

Martin K. Vollmer; Jens Mühle; Cathy M. Trudinger; Matthew Rigby; Stephen A. Montzka; Christina M. Harth; Benjamin R. Miller; Stephan Henne; P. B. Krummel; B. D. Hall; Dickon Young; Jooil Kim; Jgor Arduini; Angelina Wenger; Bo Yao; Stefan Reimann; Simon O'Doherty; Michela Maione; David M. Etheridge; Shanlan Li; D. Verdonik; Sunyoung Park; Geoff Dutton; L. Paul Steele; C. Lunder; T. S. Rhee; Ove Hermansen; Norbert Schmidbauer; Ray Wang; Matthias Hill

We report ground-based atmospheric measurements and emission estimates for the halons H-1211 (CBrClF₂), H-1301 (CBrF₃), and H-2402 (CBrF₂CBrF₂) from the AGAGE (Advanced Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration global networks. We also include results from archived air samples in canisters and from polar firn in both hemispheres, thereby deriving an atmospheric record of nearly nine decades (1930s to present). All three halons were absent from the atmosphere until ~1970, when their atmospheric burdens started to increase rapidly. In recent years H-1211 and H-2402 mole fractions have been declining, but H-1301 has continued to grow. High-frequency observations show continuing emissions of H-1211 and H-1301 near most AGAGE sites. For H-2402 the only emissions detected were derived from the region surrounding the Sea of Japan/East Sea. Based on our observations, we derive global emissions using two different inversion approaches. Emissions for H-1211 declined from a peak of 11 kt yr⁻¹ (late 1990s) to 3.9 kt yr⁻¹ at the end of our record (mean of 2013–2015), for H-1301 from 5.4 kt yr⁻¹ (late 1980s) to 1.6 kt yr⁻¹, and for H-2402 from 1.8 kt yr⁻¹ (late 1980s) to 0.38 kt yr⁻¹. Yearly summed halon emissions have decreased substantially; nevertheless, since 2000 they have accounted for ~30% of the emissions of all major anthropogenic ozone depletion substances, when weighted by ozone depletion potentials.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

HFC‐43‐10mee atmospheric abundances and global emission estimates

Tim Arnold; Diane J. Ivy; Christina M. Harth; Martin K. Vollmer; Jens Mühle; P. K. Salameh; L. Paul Steele; P. B. Krummel; Ray Wang; Dickon Young; C. Lunder; Ove Hermansen; T. S. Rhee; Jooil Kim; Stefan Reimann; Simon O'Doherty; P. J. Fraser; Peter G. Simmonds; Ronald G. Prinn; Ray F. Weiss

We report in situ atmospheric measurements of hydrofluorocarbon HFC-43-10mee (C5H2F10; 1,1,1,2,2,3,4,5,5,5-decafluoropentane) from seven observatories at various latitudes, together with measurements of archived air samples and recent Antarctic flask air samples. The global mean tropospheric abundance was 0.21 ± 0.05 ppt (parts per trillion, dry air mole fraction) in 2012, rising from 0.04 ± 0.03 ppt in 2000. We combine the measurements with a model and an inverse method to estimate rising global emissions—from 0.43 ± 0.34 Gg yr−1 in 2000 to 1.13 ± 0.31 Gg yr−1 in 2012 (~1.9 Tg CO2-eq yr−1 based on a 100 year global warming potential of 1660). HFC-43-10mee—a cleaning solvent used in the electronics industry—is currently a minor contributor to global radiative forcing relative to total HFCs; however, our calculated emissions highlight a significant difference from the available reported figures and projected estimates.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2007

Arctic smoke – record high air pollution levels in the European Arctic due to agricultural fires in Eastern Europe in spring 2006

Andreas Stohl; Torunn Berg; J. F. Burkhart; A. M. Fjaeraa; C. Forster; Andreas Herber; Øystein Hov; C. Lunder; W.W. McMillan; Samuel J. Oltmans; M. Shiobara; David Simpson; Sverre Solberg; Kerstin Stebel; Johan Ström; Kjetil Tørseth; R. Treffeisen; K. Virkkunen; Karl Espen Yttri


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006

Pan‐Arctic enhancements of light absorbing aerosol concentrations due to North American boreal forest fires during summer 2004

Andreas Stohl; E. Andrews; J. F. Burkhart; C. Forster; Andreas Herber; S. W. Hoch; D. Kowal; C. Lunder; T. Mefford; John A. Ogren; Sangeeta Sharma; N. Spichtinger; K. Stebel; Robert S. Stone; Johan Ström; Kjetil Tørseth; C. Wehrli; Karl Espen Yttri


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2010

Characterization and intercomparison of aerosol absorption photometers: result of two intercomparison workshops

T. Müller; J. S. Henzing; G. de Leeuw; A. Wiedensohler; Andrés Alastuey; Hristo Angelov; M. Bizjak; M. Collaud Coen; J. E. Engström; C. Gruening; Risto Hillamo; A. Hoffer; Kornélia Imre; P. Ivanow; G. Jennings; Junying Sun; N. Kalivitis; H. Karlsson; M. Komppula; P. Laj; Shao-Meng Li; C. Lunder; Angela Marinoni; S. Martins dos Santos; M.M. Moerman; A. Nowak; John A. Ogren; Andreas Petzold; Jean-Marc Pichon; S. Rodriquez


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Observations of 1,1-difluoroethane (HFC-152a) at AGAGE and SOGE monitoring stations in 1994–2004 and derived global and regional emission estimates

B. R. Greally; Alistair J. Manning; Stefan Reimann; A. McCulloch; J. Huang; B. L. Dunse; Peter G. Simmonds; Ronald G. Prinn; P. J. Fraser; Derek M. Cunnold; Simon O'Doherty; L. W. Porter; Konrad Stemmler; Martin K. Vollmer; C. Lunder; Norbert Schmidbauer; Ove Hermansen; Jgor Arduini; P. K. Salameh; P. B. Krummel; R. H. J. Wang; Doris Folini; Ray F. Weiss; Michela Maione; G. Nickless; Frode Stordal; R. G. Derwent


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2008

An analytical inversion method for determining regional and global emissions of greenhouse gases: Sensitivity studies and application to halocarbons

Andreas Stohl; Petra Seibert; Jgor Arduini; Sabine Eckhardt; P. J. Fraser; B. R. Greally; C. Lunder; Michela Maione; Jens Mühle; Simon O'Doherty; Ronald G. Prinn; S. Reimann; Takuya Saito; Norbert Schmidbauer; Peter G. Simmonds; Martin K. Vollmer; Ray F. Weiss; Yoko Yokouchi

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P. B. Krummel

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Ray F. Weiss

University of California

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P. J. Fraser

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Jens Mühle

University of California

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