Via SlashGear
 
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Researchers with the NASA Jet
 Propulsion Laboratory have undertaken a large project that will allow 
them to measure the carbon footprint of megacities – those with millions
 of residents, such as Los Angeles and Paris. Such an endevour is 
achieved using sensors mounted in high locations above the cities, such 
as a peak in the San Gabriel Mountains and a high-up level on the Eiffel
 Tower that is closed to tourist traffic. 
 

 
 
The sensors are designed to detect a variety of greenhouse gases, 
including methane and carbon dioxide, augmenting other stations that are
 already located in various places globally that measure greenhouse 
gases. These particular sensors are designed to achieve two purposes: 
monitor the specific carbon footprint effects of large cities, and as a 
by-product of that information to show whether such large cities are 
meeting – or are even capable of meeting – their green initiative goals.
 
Such measuring efforts will be intensified this year. In Los Angeles,
 for example, scientists working on the project will add a dozen gas 
analyzers to various rooftop locations throughout the city, as well as 
to a Prius, which will be driven throughout the city and a research 
aircraft to be navigated to “methane hotspots.” The data gathered from 
all these sensors, both present and slated for installation, is then 
analyzed using software that looks at whether levels have increased, 
decreased, or are stable, as well as determining where the gases 
originated from.
 
One of the examples given is vehicle emissions, with scientists being
 able to determine (using this data) the effects of switching to green 
vehicles over more traditional ones and whether its results indicate 
that it is something worth pursuing or whether it needs to be further 
analyzed for potential effectiveness. Reported the Associated Press, 
three years ago California saw 58-percent of its carbon dioxide come 
from gasoline-powered cars.
 
California is looking to reducing its emissions levels to a 
sub-35-percent level over 1990 by the year 2030, a rather ambitious 
goal. In 2010, it was responsible for producing 408 million tons of 
carbon dioxide, which outranks just about every country on the planet, 
putting it about on par with all of Spain. Thus far into the project, 
both the United States and France have individually spent approximately 
$3 million the project.