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The Tibetan Plateau acts as a net greenhouse gas sink

Tao Wang, Xinhui Ji, Jian‐Jun Wei, Guanting Lyu, Jinfeng Chang, Xiaoyi Wang, Yilong Wang, Guoqing Zhang, Lijun Zuo, Yuanyi Gao, Shushi Peng, Xiangjun Tian, Xuhui Wang, Shilong Piao

2025Science Bulletin11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The greenhouse gas budget on the Tibetan Plateau remains unknown and the potential for methane (CH 4 ) and nitrous oxide (N 2 O) emissions from an intensifying livestock system and expanding surface water in offsetting terrestrial carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) sinks are both of great concerns and uncertainties, which compromise an accurate assessment of Tibetan Plateau contribution to China’s ambitious climate goals by 2060s. Here we integrated greenhouse gas flux measurements at ∼500 sites in empirical modeling approaches, emissions from the livestock sector with process-based biogeochemistry modeling to estimate CH 4 and N 2 O fluxes across terrestrial ecosystems and inland waters in 2000s and 2010s. We found that emissions from livestock and inland waters, predominantly contributed by CH 4 , compensated ∼22% and ∼14% of carbon sinks provided by forests and grasslands after adjusting carbon burial in sediments and riverine carbon export, respectively. The Tibetan Plateau then acted as an appreciable greenhouse gas sink that almost compensated for its contemporary anthropogenic emissions, making it nearly climate-neutral. The enhancement of terrestrial CO 2 sinks in the 2060s under medium warming scenario would be counterbalanced by livestock CH 4 emissions when the current overgrazing status continues. By transitioning to a livestock-forage balance and implementing mitigation initiatives to reduce livestock emission intensity, the greenhouse gas sink is projected to increase by more than 1.5 times. We suggested that a transition towards sustainable pastoralism illuminates the path to minimizing ecosystem greenhouse gas emissions and amplifying the role of the Tibetan Plateau in fulfilling China’s climate ambition.

Topics & Concepts

Sink (geography)Plateau (mathematics)Environmental scienceGreenhouse gasNet (polyhedron)GeographyGeologyMathematicsCartographyGeometryOceanographyMathematical analysisAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsMethane Hydrates and Related PhenomenaHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis
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