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Hurst et al. 2004
Hurst, D.F., Romashkin, P.A., Elkins, J.W., Oberländer, E.A., Elansky, N.F., Belikov, I.B., Granberg, I.G., Golitsyn, G.S., Grisenko, A.M., Brenninkmeijer, C.A.M. and Crutzen, P.J. (2004). Emissions of ozone-depleting substances in Russia during 2001. Journal of Geophysical Research 109: doi: 10.1029/2004JD004633. issn: 0148-0227.

There is a long-standing need for measurement-based estimates of the emissions of ozone-depleting substances (ODSs) in Russia. This need arises from >20 years of globally important ODS manufacture in Russia that reportedly ceased in December 2000, for which only aggregated, unaudited production figures are available. The integrity of these production figures is questionable because, for nearly the last decade, the global emissions of several important ODSs estimated from global production figures (production-based estimates) have been insufficient to account for their measured atmospheric burdens. Are these shortfalls in worldwide production-based estimates the result of Russian emissions that are inordinate relative to the reported production figures? We estimate Russian emissions of six ODSs (chlorofluorocarbon-11 (CFC-11, CCl3F), CFC-12 (CCl2F2), CFC-113 (CCl2FCClF2), carbon tetrachloride (CCl4), methyl chloroform (CH3CCl3), and halon-1211 (CBrClF2)) from thousands of measurements of their mixing ratios along 8500 km of the Russian trans-Siberian railway in June--July 2001. Our measurement-based estimates indicate that Russian emissions in 2001, even if grossly underestimated because of underreported production, were insufficient in magnitude to play a major role in recent global emission shortfalls. The results also corroborate the reported termination of CFC production in Russia at the end of 2000. The large CFC-12 emissions observed in Russia suggest that a recent estimate of the global CFC-12 reserve is too small.

BACKGROUND DATA FILES

Abstract

Keywords
Atmospheric Composition and Structure, Constituent sources and sinks, Atmospheric Composition and Structure, Pollution—urban and regional, Atmospheric Composition and Structure, Troposphere—composition and chemistry, ozone-depleting substances, emissions, Russia
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
http://www.agu.org/journals/jb/
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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