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Climate change impact on surface ozone based on CMIP6 Earth System Models

Authors :
Prodromos Zanis
Dimitris Akritidis
Steven Turnock
Vaishali Naik
Sophie Szopa
Aristeidis Κ. Georgoulias
Susanne E. Bauer
Makoto Deushi
Larry W. Horowitz
James Keeble
Philippe Le Sager
Fiona M. O'Connor
Naga Oshima
Konstantinos Tsigaridis
Twan van Noije
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2022.

Abstract

It is presented an analysis of the effect of climate change on surface ozone (O3) discussing the related penalties and benefits around the globe from the global modeling perspective based on simulations with five CMIP6 (Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6) Earth System Models. All models conducted simulation experiments considering future climate (ssp370SST) and present-day climate (ssp370pdSST) under the same future emissions scenario (SSP3-7.0). Over regions remote from pollution sources, there is a robust decline in mean surface ozone concentration varying spatially from -0.2 to -2 ppbv oC-1, with strongest decline over tropical oceanic regions, which is mainly linked to the dominating role of enhanced ozone chemical loss with higher water vapour abudances under a warmer climate. However, ozone increases over regions close to anthropogenic pollution sources or close to enhanced natural Biogenic Volatile Organic Compounds (BVOC) emission sources with a rate ranging regionally from 0.2 to 2 ppbv oC-1, implying a regional surface ozone penalty due to global warming. The individual models show this robustly for south-eastern China and India as well as for regions of Africa but there are inter-model differences in areas within Europe and the United States (US) as well as in South America. The future climate change enhances the efficiency of precursor emissions to generate surface ozone in polluted regions and thus the magnitude of this effect depends on the regional emission changes considered in this study within the SSP3_7.0 scenario. The comparison of the climate change impact effect on surface ozone versus the combined effect of climate and emission changes indicates the dominant role of precursor emission changes in projecting surface ozone concentrations under future climate change scenarios. The authors from Aristotle University of Thessaloniki acknowledge funding from the Action titled "National Νetwork on Climate Change and its Impacts - CLIMPACT" which is implemented under the sub-project 3 of the project "Infrastructure of national research networks in the fields of Precision Medicine, Quantum Technology and Climate Change", funded by the Public Investment Program of Greece, General Secretary of Research and Technology/Ministry of Development and Investments.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e16b6f4beff6258d21862537a0d7ccdf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-12257