- 1INESC TEC, Porto, Portugal (susana.a.barbosa@inesctec.pt)
- 2ANSTO, Lucas Heights, Australia
- *A full list of authors appears at the end of the abstract
Radon (Rn-222) is a unique atmospheric tracer, since it is an inert gaseous radionuclide with a predominantly terrestrial source and a short half-life (3.8232 (8) d), enabling quantification of the relative degree of recent (< 21 d) terrestrial influences on marine air masses. High quality measurements of atmospheric radon activity concentration in remote oceanic locations enable the most accurate identification of baseline conditions. Observations of GHGs under baseline conditions, representative of hemispheric background values, are essential to characterise long-term changes in hemispheric-mean GHG concentrations, differentiate between natural and anthropogenic GHG sources, and improve understanding of the global carbon budget.
The EU-funded project NuClim (Nuclear observations to improve Climate research and GHG emission estimates) will establish world-leading high-quality atmospheric measurements of radon activity concentration and of selected GHG concentrations (CO2, and CH4) at a remote oceanic location, the Eastern North Atlantic (ENA) facility, managed by the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) programme (Office of Science from the U.S. Department of Energy), located on Graciosa Island (Azores archipelago), near the middle of the north Atlantic Ocean. These observations will provide an accurate, time-varying atmospheric baseline reference for European greenhouse gas (GHG) levels, enabling a clearer distinction between anthropogenic emissions and slowly changing background levels. NuClim will also enhance measurement of atmospheric radon activity concentration at the Mace Head Station, allowing the identification of latitudinal gradients in baseline atmospheric composition, and supporting the evaluation of the performance of GHG mitigation measures for countries in the northern hemisphere.
The high-quality nuclear and GHG observations from NuClim, and the resulting classification of terrestrial influences on marine air masses, will assist diverse climate and environmental studies, including the study of pollution events, characterisation of marine boundary layer clouds and aerosols, and exploration of the impact of natural planktonic communities on GHG emissions. This poster presents an overview of NuClim, outlines the project objectives and methodologies, and summarises the relevant data products that will be made available to the climate community.
Project NuClim received funding from the EURATOM research and training program 2023-2025 under Grant Agreement No 101166515.
Jussi Paatero, Stefan Röttger, Xuemeng Chen, Damien Martin, Anca Melintescu, Joana Barcelos Ramos, Eduardo Azevedo, Krzysztof Fortuniak, Wlodzimierz Pawlak, Dafina Kikaj, Angelina Wenger, Nuno Dias, Annette Röttger, Juha Hatakka, Timo Anttila, Hermanni Aaltonen, Maria Eduarda Silva, João Castro, Hanna K. Lappalainen, and Markku Kulmala
How to cite: Barbosa, S. and Chambers, S. and the NuClim Team: Improving GHG emissions estimates and multidisciplinary climate research using nuclear observations: the NuClim project, EGU General Assembly 2025, Vienna, Austria, 27 Apr–2 May 2025, EGU25-4446, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu25-4446, 2025.