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Impacts of climate change on surface ozone and intercontinental ozone pollution:a multi-model study

Authors :
Doherty, R. M.
Wild, O.
Shindell, D. T.
Zeng, G.
MacKenzie, I. A.
Collins, W. J.
Fiore, A. M.
Stevenson, D. S.
Dentener, F. J.
Schultz, M. G.
Hess, P.
Derwent, R. G.
Keating, T. J.
Doherty, R. M.
Wild, O.
Shindell, D. T.
Zeng, G.
MacKenzie, I. A.
Collins, W. J.
Fiore, A. M.
Stevenson, D. S.
Dentener, F. J.
Schultz, M. G.
Hess, P.
Derwent, R. G.
Keating, T. J.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

The impact of climate change between 2000 and 2095 SRES A2 climates on surface ozone (O)3 and on O3 source-receptor (S-R) relationships is quantified using three coupled climate-chemistry models (CCMs). The CCMs exhibit considerable variability in the spatial extent and location of surface O3 increases that occur within parts of high NOx emission source regions (up to 6 ppbv in the annual average and up to 14 ppbv in the season of maximum O3). In these source regions, all three CCMs show a positive relationship between surface O3 change and temperature change. Sensitivity simulations show that a combination of three individual chemical processes(i) enhanced PAN decomposition, (ii) higher water vapor concentrations, and (iii) enhanced isoprene emission largely reproduces the global spatial pattern of annual-mean surface O3 response due to climate change (R2=0.52). Changes in climate are found to exert a stronger control on the annual-mean surface O3 response through changes in climate-sensitive O3 chemistry than through changes in transport as evaluated from idealized CO-like tracer concentrations. All three CCMs exhibit a similar spatial pattern of annual-mean surface O3 change to 20% regional O3 precursor emission reductions under future climate compared to the same emission reductions applied under present-day climate. The surface O3 response to emission reductions is larger over the source region and smaller downwind in the future than under present-day conditions. All three CCMs show areas within Europe where regional emission reductions larger than 20% are required to compensate climate change impacts on annual-mean surface O3.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/65692/1/jgrd50266.pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn893867658
Document Type :
Electronic Resource