Influence of the actual weather situation on non-CO2 aviation climate effects: The REACT4C Climate Change Functions

Emissions of aviation include CO 2 , H 2 O, NO x , sulfur oxides and soot. Many studies have investigated the annual mean climate impact of aviation emissions. While CO 2 has a long atmospheric residence time and is almost uniformly distributed in the atmosphere, non-CO 2 gases, particles and their...

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Main Authors: Frömming, Christine, Grewe, Volker, Brinkop, Sabine, Jöckel, Patrick, Haslerud, Amund S., Rosanka, Simon, Manen, Jesper, Matthes, Sigrun
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2020-529
https://acp.copernicus.org/preprints/acp-2020-529/
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author Frömming, Christine
Grewe, Volker
Brinkop, Sabine
Jöckel, Patrick
Haslerud, Amund S.
Rosanka, Simon
Manen, Jesper
Matthes, Sigrun
author_facet Frömming, Christine
Grewe, Volker
Brinkop, Sabine
Jöckel, Patrick
Haslerud, Amund S.
Rosanka, Simon
Manen, Jesper
Matthes, Sigrun
author_sort Frömming, Christine
collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
description Emissions of aviation include CO 2 , H 2 O, NO x , sulfur oxides and soot. Many studies have investigated the annual mean climate impact of aviation emissions. While CO 2 has a long atmospheric residence time and is almost uniformly distributed in the atmosphere, non-CO 2 gases, particles and their products have short atmospheric residence times and are heterogeneously distributed. The climate impact of non-CO 2 aviation emissions is known to vary with different meteorological background situations. The aim of this study is to systematically investigate the influence of different weather situations on aviation climate effects over the North Atlantic region, to identify the most sensitive areas and potentially detect systematic weather related similarities. If aircraft were re-routed to avoid climate-sensitive regions, the overall aviation climate Impact might be reduced. Hence, the sensitivity of the atmosphere to local emissions provides a basis for the assessment of weather related, climate optimized flight trajectory planning. To determine the climate change contribution of an individual Emission as function of location, time and weather situation, the radiative impact of local emissions of NO x and H 2 O to changes in O 3 , CH 4 , H 2 O and contrail-cirrus was computed by means of the ECHAM5/MESSy Atmospheric Chemistry model. 4-dimensional climate change functions (CCFs) were derived thereof. Typical weather situations in the North Atlantic region were considered for winter and summer. Weather related differences in O 3 -, CH 4 -, H 2 O-, and contrail-cirrus-CCFs were investigated. The following characteristics were identified: Enhanced climate impact of contrail-cirrus was detected for emissions in areas with large scale lifting, whereas low climate impact of contrail-cirrus was found in the area of the jet stream. Northwards of 60° N contrails usually cause climate warming in winter, independent of the weather situation. NO x emissions cause a high positive climate impact if released in the area of the jet stream or in high pressure ridges, which induces a south- and downward transport of the emitted species. Whereas NO x emissions at, or transported towards high latitudes, cause low or even negative climate impact. Independent of the weather situation, total NO x effects show a minimum at ∼250 hPa, increasing towards higher and lower altitudes, with generally higher positive impact in summer than in winter. H 2 O emissions induce a high climate Impact when released in regions with lower tropopause height, whereas low climate impact occurs for emissions in areas with higher tropopause height. H 2 O-CCFs generally increase with height, and are larger in winter than in summer. The CCFs of all individual species can be combined, facilitating the assessment of total climate impact of aircraft trajectories considering CO 2 and spatially and temporally varying non-CO 2 effetcs. Furthermore they allow the optimization of aircraft trajectories with reduced overall climate impact. In most regions NO x and contrail-cirrus dominate the sensitivity to local aviation emissions. The findings of this study recommend, to consider weather related differences for flight trajectory optimization in favour of reducing total climate impact.
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:acpd85995 2025-01-16T23:41:59+00:00 Influence of the actual weather situation on non-CO2 aviation climate effects: The REACT4C Climate Change Functions Frömming, Christine Grewe, Volker Brinkop, Sabine Jöckel, Patrick Haslerud, Amund S. Rosanka, Simon Manen, Jesper Matthes, Sigrun 2020-08-18 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2020-529 https://acp.copernicus.org/preprints/acp-2020-529/ eng eng doi:10.5194/acp-2020-529 https://acp.copernicus.org/preprints/acp-2020-529/ eISSN: 1680-7324 Text 2020 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2020-529 2020-08-24T16:22:18Z Emissions of aviation include CO 2 , H 2 O, NO x , sulfur oxides and soot. Many studies have investigated the annual mean climate impact of aviation emissions. While CO 2 has a long atmospheric residence time and is almost uniformly distributed in the atmosphere, non-CO 2 gases, particles and their products have short atmospheric residence times and are heterogeneously distributed. The climate impact of non-CO 2 aviation emissions is known to vary with different meteorological background situations. The aim of this study is to systematically investigate the influence of different weather situations on aviation climate effects over the North Atlantic region, to identify the most sensitive areas and potentially detect systematic weather related similarities. If aircraft were re-routed to avoid climate-sensitive regions, the overall aviation climate Impact might be reduced. Hence, the sensitivity of the atmosphere to local emissions provides a basis for the assessment of weather related, climate optimized flight trajectory planning. To determine the climate change contribution of an individual Emission as function of location, time and weather situation, the radiative impact of local emissions of NO x and H 2 O to changes in O 3 , CH 4 , H 2 O and contrail-cirrus was computed by means of the ECHAM5/MESSy Atmospheric Chemistry model. 4-dimensional climate change functions (CCFs) were derived thereof. Typical weather situations in the North Atlantic region were considered for winter and summer. Weather related differences in O 3 -, CH 4 -, H 2 O-, and contrail-cirrus-CCFs were investigated. The following characteristics were identified: Enhanced climate impact of contrail-cirrus was detected for emissions in areas with large scale lifting, whereas low climate impact of contrail-cirrus was found in the area of the jet stream. Northwards of 60° N contrails usually cause climate warming in winter, independent of the weather situation. NO x emissions cause a high positive climate impact if released in the area of the jet stream or in high pressure ridges, which induces a south- and downward transport of the emitted species. Whereas NO x emissions at, or transported towards high latitudes, cause low or even negative climate impact. Independent of the weather situation, total NO x effects show a minimum at ∼250 hPa, increasing towards higher and lower altitudes, with generally higher positive impact in summer than in winter. H 2 O emissions induce a high climate Impact when released in regions with lower tropopause height, whereas low climate impact occurs for emissions in areas with higher tropopause height. H 2 O-CCFs generally increase with height, and are larger in winter than in summer. The CCFs of all individual species can be combined, facilitating the assessment of total climate impact of aircraft trajectories considering CO 2 and spatially and temporally varying non-CO 2 effetcs. Furthermore they allow the optimization of aircraft trajectories with reduced overall climate impact. In most regions NO x and contrail-cirrus dominate the sensitivity to local aviation emissions. The findings of this study recommend, to consider weather related differences for flight trajectory optimization in favour of reducing total climate impact. Text North Atlantic Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
spellingShingle Frömming, Christine
Grewe, Volker
Brinkop, Sabine
Jöckel, Patrick
Haslerud, Amund S.
Rosanka, Simon
Manen, Jesper
Matthes, Sigrun
Influence of the actual weather situation on non-CO2 aviation climate effects: The REACT4C Climate Change Functions
title Influence of the actual weather situation on non-CO2 aviation climate effects: The REACT4C Climate Change Functions
title_full Influence of the actual weather situation on non-CO2 aviation climate effects: The REACT4C Climate Change Functions
title_fullStr Influence of the actual weather situation on non-CO2 aviation climate effects: The REACT4C Climate Change Functions
title_full_unstemmed Influence of the actual weather situation on non-CO2 aviation climate effects: The REACT4C Climate Change Functions
title_short Influence of the actual weather situation on non-CO2 aviation climate effects: The REACT4C Climate Change Functions
title_sort influence of the actual weather situation on non-co2 aviation climate effects: the react4c climate change functions
url https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2020-529
https://acp.copernicus.org/preprints/acp-2020-529/