GLOBE-Net, October 9, 2012 - Arizona
State University researchers have developed a new software system
capable of estimating greenhouse gas emissions across entire urban
landscapes, all the way down to roads and individual buildings.
Until now, scientists quantified carbon dioxide CO2
emissions at a much broader level.
Dubbed Hestia after the Greek goddess of the hearth and home,
researchers presented the new system in an article published
October 9 in Environmental Science and Technology. Hestia combines
extensive public database data mining with traffic simulation and
building by building energy consumption modeling. Its high
resolution maps clearly identify CO2 emission sources in a way that
policy makers can utilize and the public can understand.
Cities have had little information with which to guide
reductions in greenhouse gas emissions - and you can't reduce what
you can't measure, said Kevin Gurney, an associate professor in
ASU's School of Life Sciences, and senior scientist with the Global
Institute of Sustainability. With Hestia, we can provide
cities with a complete, three dimensional picture of where, when
and how carbon dioxide emissions are occurring.
The research team collected data from a
wide variety of sources such as local air pollution reports,
traffic counts, and tax assessor parcel information. The data is
then combined within a modeling system for quantifying CO2
emissions at the level of individual buildings and street
segments.
So far, scientists have applied Hestia to the city of
Indianapolis, Indiana, and work is ongoing for the cities of Los
Angeles, California and Phoenix, Arizona. They hope to ultimately
map the CO2 emissions in all major cities across the United States,
which accounts for nearly one quarter of all global CO2 emissions.
The Hestia research team believes this type of detailed emissions
information can help determine what we as a society, can do locally
and globally about climate change.
As a community, we must take a leadership role in sustaining our
relationship with the environment, said ASU President Michael M.
Crow. This research, and its implications for global
engagement regarding climate change, is an exciting step forward.
Hestia gives us the next tool we need to help policy makers create
effective greenhouse gas legislation.
These results may also help overcome current barriers to the
United States joining an international climate change treaty,
agreed Gurney, Hestia's lead scientist. Many countries are
unwilling to sign a treaty when greenhouse gas emission reductions
cannot be independently verified.
According to researchers, Hestia's increased detail and accuracy
will help cities, and possibly even other nations, identify where
an investment in energy and greenhouse gas savings would have the
greatest impact.
Leading in sustainability is not easy; however, as Mayor, I am
committed to doing so, Phoenix Mayor Greg Stanton said.
Undoubtedly, Hestia will be a good tool to help us make more
informed decisions as leaders in Phoenix and the Valley around
issues of air quality, health and a sustainable future.

With Hestia, researchers from Arizona State University
have a detailed understanding of where CO2 is being emitted from
the urban landscape. This map shows where CO2 is emitted across the
city of Indianapolis, Indiana, and combines data from sources
including factories, automobiles on roadways, homes, and power
plants. Photo credit: Bedrich Benes and Michel Abdul
Massih
Although climate change presents society with tough challenges,
Gurney believes this new system enables concrete, positive steps
towards mitigating the problem.
Hestia offers practical information we can use to identify the
most cost effective ways to reduce emissions and track progress
over time, Gurney said. Scientists have spent decades
describing the seriousness of climate change. Now, we are offering
practical information to help do something about it.
Purdue Showalter Trust, Knauf Insulation, and the National
Institute for Standards and Technology funded the three year Hestia
project, which involved researchers Bedrich Benes and Michael Abdul
Massih from Purdue's University Department of Computer Graphics and
Technology.
Hestia is part of a larger effort that combines information
about emissions with ground and satellite based measurements of
atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration. It is now part of the
INFLUX experiment in Indianapolis and is expected to complement
NASA's planned December 2013 launch of the Orbital Carbon
Observatory satellite, which will measure the concentration of CO2
in the Earth's atmosphere.