TY - JOUR
T1 - Global and regional radiative forcing from 20 % reductions in BC, OC and SO4 - An HTAP2 multi-model study
AU - Stjern, Camilla Weum
AU - Samset, Bjørn Hallvard
AU - Myhre, Gunnar
AU - Bian, Huisheng
AU - Chin, Mian
AU - Davila, Yanko
AU - Dentener, Frank
AU - Emmons, Louisa
AU - Flemming, Johannes
AU - Haslerud, Amund Søvde
AU - Henze, Daven
AU - Jonson, Jan Eiof
AU - Kucsera, Tom
AU - Lund, Marianne Tronstad
AU - Schulz, Michael
AU - Sudo, Kengo
AU - Takemura, Toshihiko
AU - Tilmes, Simone
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Research Council of Norway through the grants AC/BC (240372), NetBC (244141) and SLAC. The CESM project is supported by the National Science Foundation and the Office of Science (BER) of the US Department of Energy. The National Center for Atmospheric Research is funded by the National Science Foundation. The SPRINTARS is supported by the supercomputer system of the National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan, the Environment Research and Technology Development Fund (S-12-3) of the Ministry of the Environment, Japan, and JSPS KAKENHI grants 15H01728 and 15K12190. Johannes Flemming's contribution has been supported by the Copernicus Atmosphere Service. This study also benefitted from the Norwegian Research Council projects no. 235548 (Role of SLCF in Global Climate Regime) and no. 229796 (AeroCom-P3).
Publisher Copyright:
© Author(s) 2016.
PY - 2016/11/1
Y1 - 2016/11/1
N2 - In the Hemispheric Transport of Air Pollution Phase 2 (HTAP2) exercise, a range of global atmospheric general circulation and chemical transport models performed coordinated perturbation experiments with 20 % reductions in emissions of anthropogenic aerosols, or aerosol precursors, in a number of source regions. Here, we compare the resulting changes in the atmospheric load and vertically resolved profiles of black carbon (BC), organic aerosols (OA) and sulfate (SO4) from 10 models that include treatment of aerosols. We use a set of temporally, horizontally and vertically resolved profiles of aerosol forcing efficiency (AFE) to estimate the impact of emission changes in six major source regions on global radiative forcing (RF) pertaining to the direct aerosol effect, finding values between. 51.9 and 210.8 mW m-2 Tg-1 for BC, between -2.4 and -17.9 mW m-2 Tg-1 for OA and between -3.6 and -10.3 W m-2 Tg-1 for SO4. In most cases, the local influence dominates, but results show that mitigations in south and east Asia have substantial impacts on the radiative budget in all investigated receptor regions, especially for BC. In Russia and the Middle East, more than 80 % of the forcing for BC and OA is due to extra-regional emission reductions. Similarly, for North America, BC emissions control in east Asia is found to be more important than domestic mitigations, which is consistent with previous findings. Comparing fully resolved RF calculations to RF estimates based on vertically averaged AFE profiles allows us to quantify the importance of vertical resolution to RF estimates. We find that locally in the source regions, a 20 % emission reduction strengthens the radiative forcing associated with SO4 by 25 % when including the vertical dimension, as the AFE for SO4 is strongest near the surface. Conversely, the local RF from BC weakens by 37 % since BC AFE is low close to the ground. The fraction of BC direct effect forcing attributable to intercontinental transport, on the other hand, is enhanced by one-third when accounting for the vertical aspect, because long-range transport primarily leads to aerosol changes at high altitudes, where the BC AFE is strong. While the surface temperature response may vary with the altitude of aerosol change, the analysis in the present study is not extended to estimates of temperature or precipitation changes.
AB - In the Hemispheric Transport of Air Pollution Phase 2 (HTAP2) exercise, a range of global atmospheric general circulation and chemical transport models performed coordinated perturbation experiments with 20 % reductions in emissions of anthropogenic aerosols, or aerosol precursors, in a number of source regions. Here, we compare the resulting changes in the atmospheric load and vertically resolved profiles of black carbon (BC), organic aerosols (OA) and sulfate (SO4) from 10 models that include treatment of aerosols. We use a set of temporally, horizontally and vertically resolved profiles of aerosol forcing efficiency (AFE) to estimate the impact of emission changes in six major source regions on global radiative forcing (RF) pertaining to the direct aerosol effect, finding values between. 51.9 and 210.8 mW m-2 Tg-1 for BC, between -2.4 and -17.9 mW m-2 Tg-1 for OA and between -3.6 and -10.3 W m-2 Tg-1 for SO4. In most cases, the local influence dominates, but results show that mitigations in south and east Asia have substantial impacts on the radiative budget in all investigated receptor regions, especially for BC. In Russia and the Middle East, more than 80 % of the forcing for BC and OA is due to extra-regional emission reductions. Similarly, for North America, BC emissions control in east Asia is found to be more important than domestic mitigations, which is consistent with previous findings. Comparing fully resolved RF calculations to RF estimates based on vertically averaged AFE profiles allows us to quantify the importance of vertical resolution to RF estimates. We find that locally in the source regions, a 20 % emission reduction strengthens the radiative forcing associated with SO4 by 25 % when including the vertical dimension, as the AFE for SO4 is strongest near the surface. Conversely, the local RF from BC weakens by 37 % since BC AFE is low close to the ground. The fraction of BC direct effect forcing attributable to intercontinental transport, on the other hand, is enhanced by one-third when accounting for the vertical aspect, because long-range transport primarily leads to aerosol changes at high altitudes, where the BC AFE is strong. While the surface temperature response may vary with the altitude of aerosol change, the analysis in the present study is not extended to estimates of temperature or precipitation changes.
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U2 - 10.5194/acp-16-13579-2016
DO - 10.5194/acp-16-13579-2016
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84994353673
SN - 1680-7316
VL - 16
SP - 13579
EP - 13599
JO - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
JF - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
IS - 21
ER -