Modelling future changes in surface ozone: a parameterized approach

Wild, O. and Fiore, A. M. and Shindell, D. T. and Doherty, R. M. and Collins, W. J. and Dentener, F. J. and Schultz, M. G. and Gong, S. and MacKenzie, I. A. and Zeng, G. and Hess, P. and Duncan, B. N. and Bergmann, D. J. and Szopa, S. and Jonson, J. E. and Keating, T. J. and Zuber, A. (2012) Modelling future changes in surface ozone: a parameterized approach. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 12 (4). pp. 2037-2054. ISSN 1680-7316

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Abstract

This study describes a simple parameterization to estimate regionally averaged changes in surface ozone due to past or future changes in anthropogenic precursor emissions based on results from 14 global chemistry transport models. The method successfully reproduces the results of full simulations with these models. For a given emission scenario it provides the ensemble mean surface ozone change, a regional source attribution for each change, and an estimate of the associated uncertainty as represented by the variation between models. Using the Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) emission scenarios as an example, we show how regional surface ozone is likely to respond to emission changes by 2050 and how changes in precursor emissions and atmospheric methane contribute to this. Surface ozone changes are substantially smaller than expected with the SRES A1B, A2 and B2 scenarios, with annual global mean reductions of as much as 2 ppb by 2050 vs. increases of 4-6 ppb under SRES, and this reflects the assumptions of more stringent precursor emission controls under the RCP scenarios. We find an average difference of around 5 ppb between the outlying RCP 2.6 and RCP 8.5 scenarios, about 75% of which can be attributed to differences in methane abundance. The study reveals the increasing importance of limiting atmospheric methane growth as emissions of other precursors are controlled, but highlights differences in modelled ozone responses to methane changes of as much as a factor of two, indicating that this remains a major uncertainty in current models.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/core/keywords/environmentalscience
Subjects:
?? tropospheric ozoneclimate-changeair-qualityemissionspollutiongasesstabilizationtransportaerosolspathwayenvironmental scienceatmospheric science ??
ID Code:
53475
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
13 Apr 2012 08:32
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
28 Mar 2024 00:38