Role of OH variability in the stalling of the global atmospheric CH4 growth rate from 1999 to 2006

2016 
Abstract. The growth in atmospheric methane (CH 4 ) concentrations over the past 2 decades has shown large variability on a timescale of several years. Prior to 1999 the globally averaged CH 4 concentration was increasing at a rate of 6.0 ppb yr −1 , but during a stagnation period from 1999 to 2006 this growth rate slowed to 0.6 ppb yr −1 . From 2007 to 2009 the growth rate again increased to 4.9 ppb yr −1 . These changes in growth rate are usually ascribed to variations in CH 4 emissions. We have used a 3-D global chemical transport model, driven by meteorological reanalyses and variations in global mean hydroxyl (OH) concentrations derived from CH 3 CCl 3 observations from two independent networks, to investigate these CH 4 growth variations. The model shows that between 1999 and 2006 changes in the CH 4 atmospheric loss contributed significantly to the suppression in global CH 4 concentrations relative to the pre-1999 trend. The largest factor in this is relatively small variations in global mean OH on a timescale of a few years, with minor contributions of atmospheric transport of CH 4 to its sink region and of atmospheric temperature. Although changes in emissions may be important during the stagnation period, these results imply a smaller variation is required to explain the observed CH 4 trends. The contribution of OH variations to the renewed CH 4 growth after 2007 cannot be determined with data currently available.
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