Microcarb launch heralds new era of carbon monitoring in Europe

Why is Microcarb important?

Rüdiger Lang: 2024 was the hottest year ever recorded, both globally and across Europe – a stark reminder of the urgency of tackling the climate crisis driven by human greenhouse gas emissions. While we know how much carbon dioxide is accumulating in the atmosphere overall, we still lack detailed information about exactly where emissions come from.

The Paris Agreement created momentum to invest in better ways to monitor emissions, and as the first dedicated European CO2 mission, Microcarb is a vital part of Europe’s efforts to track greenhouse gases, hold emitters accountable, and guide climate action. To build a complete picture, we need to separate natural flows of carbon dioxide from those caused by humans and identify sources that remain underrepresented or undetected. If countries can pinpoint emissions more accurately, they can implement targeted policies and, crucially, see whether those measures are working.

Measuring emissions this precisely is extremely challenging, but Microcarb’s sensors achieve accuracy close to 99.98%, making it possible to detect and distinguish both natural and human contributions. Microcarb will quantify how much carbon dioxide is released from both natural and human-made sources and how CO2 moves between the Earth surface, the oceans, the forests, and the atmosphere. The satellite can also zoom in to capture high-resolution snapshots of specific targets such as cities or farming regions.

There is a real need for consistent, reliable data to fill gaps in our understanding, and Microcarb will play an important role in that effort, support more effective climate policies, as well as helping to lay the foundation for larger systems like the Copernicus CO2M constellation.

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