Title: High Resolution Fire Emission Estimates
1High Resolution Fire Emission Estimates
- Christine Wiedinmyer
- Atmospheric Chemistry Division/
- National Center for Atmospheric Research
2Fire Emissions Development
- Timing/location
- Area Burned
- Biomass (fuel) burned
- Emission Factors
- Chemical
- physical
3Many efforts to develop fire emissions
inventories models
- Global, regional, local
- Various resolutions
- Various species
- Driven by different data (remote
sensing/reports/both) - I try here to summarize some of the major efforts
that of which I am aware
4Local/Regional
- U.S. NEI
- 2002 inventory, detailed, developed by Air
Resources, Inc. (Golden) - Emissions are included in the national EI, but
unclear how emissions are spatially or temporally
resolved. - STI/USFS
- The USFS AirFire Team and Sonoma Technology, Inc.
have developed the SMARTFIRE fire information
system, which, in conjunction with the BlueSky
Framework (http//blueskyframework.org), has been
used by the EPA to develop wildland fire
emissions for the National Emissions Inventory
for recent years - Combines HMS data with local reports
- Working with WRAP FETS
- Local Agencies
- E.g., CARB Emissions for California
- David Lavoue, Canada
- Detailed Canadian fire emissions
- Working on expanding to N. America including
CONUS and AK
5Continental/North Central America
- Wiedinmyer/NCAR model
- Daily, 1km2 resolution
- North and Central America 2001-present
- Global 2007-present
- Particles/ trace gases, working on speciation
profiles for modelers - USFS Emissions (Wei Min Hao/Shawn Urbanski)
- NASA NACP Project
- 1 km2 resolution
- CONUS / Canada/ North America
- The project currently has completed the mapping
of burned areas at a 1 km 1 km resolution from
2002 to 2008 and has produced the daily emission
rates in 2007
6Continental/Global Efforts
- Global Fire Emissions Database
- Guido van der Werf and Jim Randerson
- 8-day averages, 1 degree resolution
- Based on MODIS fire counts (climate model
resolution) - 1997-2008
- NASA Effort (Arlindo da Silva)
- QFED
- near-real time daily biomass burning emissions to
support GEOS-5 aerosol forecasting - Up to 0.25 degree resolution
7NOAA/NESDIS
- WF_ABBA
- Satellite detections from geostationary
satellites - Global coverage coming soon (B. Pierce, NOAA)
- Emissions modeling by Shobha Kondragunta and
Xiaoyang Zhang - Operational for forecasting applications
- Biomass burning emissions are produced once a day
from GOES-E. The output parameters include
hourly emissions in PM2.5, CO, CO2, CH4, N2O,
NH3, NOX, SO2, TNMHC, separately. - The emission data are available at
http//satepsanone.nesdis.noaa.gov/pub/EPA/GBBEP - The product from GOES-W is available at
http//satepsanone.nesdis.noaa.gov/pub/EPA/GBBEP_W
/ - A product is running internally every day to
create emissions from MODIS, GOES and AVHRR. It
provides hourly PM2.5, hourly burned area, and
hourly FRP. The data cover CONUS originally and
entire NA currently. - Hourly Global biomass burning emissions (PM2.5)
is produced using fire radiative power from
GOES-W and GOES-E (GOES 10, GOES 11, and GOES
12), MET09 and MTS01.
8Issues
- Political boundary issues
- E.g., fuel loadings, reported information
- Area and fuel burned estimation processes
- Reports versus remotely sensed fire detections
- Fire detections versus Fire Radiative Power to
drive emissions - Emission factors
- Plume Rise
9Inter-comparison of methods
Area Burned
CO Emission
J. Al-Saadi, 2008
10SPECIFICS
11CARB Emissions
- The California Air Resources Board uses a version
of the federal First Order Fire Effects Model
(FOFEM) customized to California and implemented
in ArcGIS, to generate geospatially and
temporally explicit inventories of criteria
pollutant emissions from wild and prescribed
fires in the state. The model uses GIS-based fire
perimeters from a statewide fire geodatabase
maintained by the Fire and Resource Assessment
Program (FRAP) of the California Dept. of
Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE). Â Fire
perimeter GIS data are developed from field GPS
data or from digitized aerial imagery. Â Rasters
of thousand-hour fuel moistures (NFDR-TH) are
also used by the model. Â NFDR-TH rasters are from
the USDA-FS WFAS. For photochemical modeling,
modeled emissions are apportioned by hour of the
day and vertically into the boundary layer using
a scheme developed by Dave Sandberg (USDA-FS PNW
Research Station) for the Fire Emissions Joint
Forum of the Western Regional Air Partnership
(FEJF-WRAP). Â The fire emission inventories are
fed into regional photochemical models used to
simulate ozone and particulate matter statewide.Â
CARB plans to also use the model to develop the
statewide forest and rangeland greenhouse gas
emission inventory. Â Updates to the model are
also underway via a contract with Dr. Peng Gong
of UC Berkeley.
12STI/USFS
- The USFS AirFire Team and Sonoma Technology, Inc.
have developed the SMARTFIRE fire information
system, which, in conjunction with the BlueSky
Framework (http//blueskyframework.org), has been
used by the EPA to develop wildland fire
emissions for the National Emissions Inventory
for recent years. SMARTFIRE currently uses data
from both the NOAA Hazard Mapping System (HMS)
fire detects and the Incident Command System
(ICS) 209 ground based reports. BlueSky can use a
number of different fuel loading maps and
consumption models, and various model pathways
have been used, but the current standard is the
FCCS fuel loading maps combined with the CONSUME3
consumption model. Significant upgrades to both
SMARTFIRE and BlueSky are ongoing in
collaboration with the WRAP, RSAC, CIRA, NRL, and
UCAR. Near-term work for SMARTFIRE is being done
to enable the inclusion of additional datasets
that can be reconciled together to avoid double
(or multiple) counting of the same fire. Datasets
identified for inclusion first are the prescribed
fire data from the WRAP's FETS system in
conjunction with the WRAP and AirSciences, and
the MBTS burn scar data from the USFS RSAC. A
pilot study to examine how best to combine these
datasets has been planned as collaborative
project between the USFS, WRAP, STI, AirSciences,
and CIRA. BlueSky improvements underway include
the addition modules for satellite emissions
calculation systems - specifically the system
developed by Weidinmyer at UCAR and the FLAMBE
system developed by the NRL Monterey, and other
satellite data being incorporated for fuel
moisture, plume rise, and other framework pieces.
Comparison studies between various emissions
calculation pathways (including the 12 currently
in BlueSky and ones being added above) are
currently being done under the Smoke and
Emissions Model Intercomparison Project (SEMIP,
http//semip.org), a JFSP project that has
identified the 2008 NEI as a specific test case
for comparison. Comparison results are currently
available online at http//data.semip.org.
13WRAP
- The WRAP's Fire Emissions Tracking System (FETS)
is a web-enabled database for planned and
unplanned fire events in the Western U.S. Â It is
intended as a planning tool for daily smoke
management coordination, and retrospective
analyses such as emission inventories and
regional haze air quality planning tasks.Â
Current data status by fire type and smoke
management program for activity reporting and
subsequent emissions estimation are detailed in
the attached FETS Data Status document, which is
updated daily.   Current FETS development work
through 2010 will support routine daily FETS
operations and add reporting of fire activity
data for missing planned fire source categories
(Prescribed Wildland, Agricultural, and Rangeland
fire types) for Western smoke management programs
not currently reporting to FETS. A proposal is
in development for the EPA Emissions Inventory
Group to expand FETS-style reporting for other
state and smoke management programs across the
U.S., to assist in review, quality assurance, and
completeness of fire emissions reported in the
EPA National Emissions Inventory system.Â
Development of a top-down, first principles
estimate of Residential Wood Combustion emissions
across the West is under consideration to
supplement the other biomass burning categories
already tracked in FETS. WRAP-Air Sciences will
be providing FETS applications and analyzing data
as an integral part of a pilot study to examine
how best to combine datasets from USFS-STI
SmartFire/BlueSky Framework and USFS RSAC with
FETS data, through a collaborative project
between the USFS, WRAP, STI, AirSciences, EPA,
and NPS. A key feature of the collaborative
pilot project is to try to identify optimum
combinations of data available and processing
effort needed to produce high-quality datasets in
3 time frames 1) short-term forecasting, 2)
medium-term emissions inventory
reporting/tracking, and 3) longer-term
retrospective air quality planning datasets. Â Â
14NASA (Arlindo Da Salva/Peter Colarco)
- We have been developing near-real time daily
biomass burning emissions in support of our
GEOS-5 aerosol forecasting system, the so-called
Quick Fire Emission Dataset (QFED). These
emissions are based on the MODIS fire products
from both AQUA and TERRA satellites. The current
algorithm (QFED v1) uses fire counts with
constant emission factors calibrated against GFED
v2. The new top-down algorithm being evaluated
(QFED v2) uses MODIS Fire Radiative Power and
will be attached to a plume rise model. The
GEOS-5 aerosol forecasting system has a nominal
resolution of 0.25x1/3 deg, globally. QFED v2
will match this resolution.   Â
15Hao/Urbanski (USFS)
- The fire and emission dataset used in the
WRF-CHEM model is being developed as an extension
of Dr. Hao?s ongoing NASA North American Carbon
Program (NACP) project, Daily, Weekly, Seasonal
and Interannual Variability of CO2, CO and CH4
Emissions from Biomass Burning in North America
and Their Impact on Atmospheric Chemical
Composition. The final dataset will include the
daily burned areas (Li et al., 2004), and
associated emissions of CO2, CO, CH4, volatile
organic compounds, PM2.5, and black carbon and
organic carbon of aerosols (Urbanski et al.,
2008, 2009) at a 1 km 1 km resolution for the
continental U.S. from 2002 to 2010. It is the
most comprehensive high-resolution dataset for
the spatial and temporal distribution of biomass
burning and associated emissions in the U.S. The
project currently has completed the mapping of
burned areas at a 1 km 1 km resolution from
2002 to 2008 and has produced the daily emission
rates in 2007.
16NOAA/NESDIS
- The biomass burning emissions in the North
America are operational products in NOAA/NESDIS.
They are publicly accessible via the URL that I
provided in the slides. The emissions were
calculated from 2001. The global estimates are
hourly with a spatial resolution of 4km.
17NOAA/NESDIS
Operational Products of Biomass Burning Emissions
Derived From Satellite-based Active Fires
Shobha Kondragunta and Xiaoyang Zhang
18Burned Area Simulated from Active Fires in 2005
Hourly burned areas are produced from active fire
observations using diurnal pattern in near real
time.
19Fuel Loadings Estimated from MODIS Vegetation
Properties (1KM)
- Forest foliage
- forest branch
- shrub
- grass
- litter
- coarse woody detritus
(ton/ha)
20Operational product of Biomass Burning Emissions
from GOES-E
- Biomass burning emissions are produced once a
day. The output parameters include - hourly emissions in PM2.5, CO, CO2, CH4,
N2O, NH3, NOX, SO2, TNMHC, separately. - The emission data are available at
http//satepsanone.nesdis.noaa.gov/pub/EPA/GBBEP/
21Operational Biomass Burning Emissions from GOES-W
- Biomass burning emissions derived from GOES-W
cover west part of North America. The output has
the same format as GOES-E emissions - The product is available at http//satepsanone.ne
sdis.noaa.gov/pub/EPA/GBBEP_W/
22Emissions from MODISAVHRRGOES
This product is running internally every day. It
provides hourly PM2.5, hourly burned area, and
hourly FRP. The data cover CONUS originally and
entire NA currently.
23Global PM2.5 Emissions from Fires in September
15, 2009
Hourly Global biomass burning emissions (PM2.5)
is produced using fire radiative power from
GOES-W and GOES-E (GOES 10, GOES 11, and GOES
12), MET09 and MTS01.