logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Under-reporting of greenhouse gas emissions in U.S. cities

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Under-reporting of greenhouse gas emissions in U.S. cities

K. R. Gurney, J. Liang, et al.

In a groundbreaking study conducted by Kevin Robert Gurney and colleagues, self-reported greenhouse gas emissions from 48 US cities reveal a startling average underreporting of 18.3%. This discrepancy raises questions about urban emission accuracy and suggests a need for a transformative GHG information system.... show more
Abstract
Cities dominate greenhouse gas emissions. Many have generated self-reported emission inventories, but their value to emissions mitigation depends on their accuracy, which remains untested. Here, we compare self-reported inventories from 48 US cities to independent estimates from the Vulcan carbon dioxide emissions data product, which is consistent with atmospheric measurements. We found that cities under-report their own greenhouse gas emissions, on average, by 18.3% (range: -145.5% to +63.5%) a difference which if extrapolated to all U.S. cities, exceeds California's total emissions by 23.5%. Differences arise because city inventories omit particular fuels and source types and estimate transportation emissions differently. These results raise concerns about self-reported inventories in planning or assessing emissions, and warrant consideration of the new urban greenhouse gas information system recently developed by the scientific community.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Feb 02, 2021
Authors
Kevin Robert Gurney, Jianming Liang, Geoffrey Roest, Yang Song, Kimberly Mueller, Thomas Lauvaux
Tags
greenhouse gas emissions
self-reported inventories
US cities
Vulcan CO2
underreporting
transportation emissions
urban information system
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny