Abstract: Saint Petersburg is the second most populous city in the Russian Federation and the fourth in Europe. According to official statistics, ∼5.6 million people permanently live in the city. In order to experimentally estimate greenhouse gas emissions from the territory of the St. Petersburg agglomeration, an original combined approach was developed and implemented during EMME-2019 and ЕММЕ-2020 observational campaigns. The paper summarizes the results of mobile experiments in 2019 and 2020. The period March – early May chosen for the EMME campaigns is shown to be optimal for estimating CO2 emissions. The average anthropogenic additives caused by emissions from the territory of St. Petersburg were assessed at ∼1.07 ppmv for CO2 and ∼6.61 ppbv for CH4. Experimental estimates of specific greenhouse gas fluxes for the territory of the St. Petersburg agglomeration amounted to 72 kt km−2 year−1 CO2 and 198 t km−2 year−1 CH4 for six days of the campaign in 2020; 80 kt km−2 year−1 CO2 and 161 t km−2 year−1 CH4 for 15 days of the campaigns in 2019 and 2020. The CH4/CO2 and CO/CO2 emission ratios for St. Petersburg in March–early May 2020 averaged 6.4 and 5.7 ppbv/ppmv, respectively. Lockdown restrictions due to COVID-19 pandemic affected the structure of emission from the territory of St. Petersburg, namely, a sharp decrease in transport activity significantly decreased CO emissions from motor vehicles.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)786-797
Number of pages12
JournalAtmospheric and Oceanic Optics
Volume37
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

    Research areas

  • anthropogenic emission, dispersion simulation, greenhouse gas, ground-based remote sensing, megacity, mobile experiment, portable FTIR spectrometer

ID: 132167741