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Tim Arnold

Tim Arnold

Associate Professor

Tim Arnold

The increasing atmospheric burden of the greenhouse gas sulfur hexafluoride (SF6)

Author

  • Peter G. Simmonds
  • Matthew Rigby
  • Alistair J. Manning
  • Sunyoung Park
  • Kieran M. Stanley
  • Archie McCulloch
  • Stephan Henne
  • Francesco Graziosi
  • Michela Maione
  • Jgor Arduini
  • Stefan Reimann
  • Martin K. Vollmer
  • Jens Mühle
  • Simon O'Doherty
  • Dickon Young
  • Paul B. Krummel
  • Paul J. Fraser
  • Ray F. Weiss
  • Peter K. Salameh
  • Christina M. Harth
  • Mi-Kyung Park
  • Hyeri Park
  • Tim Arnold
  • Chris Rennick
  • L. Paul Steele
  • Blagoj Mitrevski
  • Ray H. J. Wang
  • Ronald G. Prinn

Summary, in English

We report a 40-year history of SF6 atmospheric mole fractions measured at the Advanced Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment (AGAGE) monitoring sites, combined with archived air samples, to determine emission estimates from 1978 to 2018. Previously we reported a global emission rate of 7.3±0.6 Gg yr−1 in 2008 and over the past decade emissions have continued to increase by about 24 % to 9.04±0.35 Gg yr−1 in 2018. We show that changing patterns in SF6 consumption from developed (Kyoto Protocol Annex-1) to developing countries (non-Annex-1) and the rapid global expansion of the electric power industry, mainly in Asia, have increased the demand for SF6-insulated switchgear, circuit breakers, and transformers. The large bank of SF6 sequestered in this electrical equipment provides a substantial source of emissions from maintenance, replacement, and continuous leakage. Other emissive sources of SF6 occur from the magnesium, aluminium, and electronics industries as well as more minor industrial applications. More recently, reported emissions, including those from electrical equipment and metal industries, primarily in the Annex-1 countries, have declined steadily through substitution of alternative blanketing gases and technological improvements in less emissive equipment and more efficient industrial practices. Nevertheless, there are still demands for SF6 in Annex-1 countries due to economic growth, as well as continuing emissions from older equipment and additional emissions from newly installed SF6-insulated electrical equipment, although at low emission rates. In addition, in the non-Annex-1 countries, SF6 emissions have increased due to an expansion in the growth of the electrical power, metal, and electronics industries to support their continuing development.

There is an annual difference of 2.5–5 Gg yr−1 (1990–2018) between our modelled top-down emissions and the UNFCCC-reported bottom-up emissions (United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change), which we attempt to reconcile through analysis of the potential contribution of emissions from the various industrial applications which use SF6. We also investigate regional emissions in East Asia (China, S. Korea) and western Europe and their respective contributions to the global atmospheric SF6 inventory. On an average annual basis, our estimated emissions from the whole of China are approximately 10 times greater than emissions from western Europe. In 2018, our modelled Chinese and western European emissions accounted for ∼36 % and 3.1 %, respectively, of our global SF6 emissions estimate.

Publishing year

2020

Language

English

Pages

7271-7290

Publication/Series

Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics

Volume

20

Issue

12

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Copernicus GmbH

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1680-7316