Nonlinear impacts of future anthropogenic aerosol emissions on Arctic warming

Past reductions of anthropogenic aerosol concentrations in Europe and North America could have amplified Arctic warming. In the future the impact of air pollution policies may differ, because the major anthropogenic sources of atmospheric aerosols are increasingly located in Asia. In this study nume...

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Published in:Environmental Research Letters
Main Authors: DOBRICIC Srdan, POZZOLI Luca, VIGNATI Elisabetta, VAN DINGENEN Rita, WILSON Julian, RUSSO Simone, KLIMONT Zbigniew
Language:English
Published: IOP PUBLISHING LTD 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC108148
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aaf8ee
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spelling ftjrc:oai:publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu:JRC108148 2023-05-15T14:33:13+02:00 Nonlinear impacts of future anthropogenic aerosol emissions on Arctic warming DOBRICIC Srdan POZZOLI Luca VIGNATI Elisabetta VAN DINGENEN Rita WILSON Julian RUSSO Simone KLIMONT Zbigniew 2019 Online https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC108148 https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aaf8ee ENG eng IOP PUBLISHING LTD JRC108148 2019 ftjrc https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aaf8ee 2022-05-01T08:20:44Z Past reductions of anthropogenic aerosol concentrations in Europe and North America could have amplified Arctic warming. In the future the impact of air pollution policies may differ, because the major anthropogenic sources of atmospheric aerosols are increasingly located in Asia. In this study numerical experiments evaluating only direct aerosol effects on atmospheric temperatures indicate that, while reduced carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions weaken Arctic warming, direct radiative forcing effects by reductions of anthropogenic aerosol concentrations, additional to those obtained by lower CO2 emissions, can either amplify or diminish it. Interactions between regionally modified radiation in Asia and internal climate variability may differently initiate and sustain atmospheric planetary waves propagating into the Arctic. In a nonlinear manner planetary waves may redistribute atmospheric and oceanic meridional heat fluxes at the high latitudes and either amplify or diminish Arctic warming in 2050. Lower CO2 concentrations might apparently contribute to reduce the interactions between the Arctic system and the lower latitudes, thus reducing the influence of strong air quality measures in Asia on the Arctic amplification of global warming. While past and present air pollution policies could have amplified Arctic warming, in the future the effects from atmospheric pollution reductions are less certain, depending on the future CO2 concentrations, and requiring improved simulations of changing aerosol concentrations and their interactions with clouds in Asia and the Arctic. JRC.C.5 - Air and Climate Other/Unknown Material Arctic Global warming Joint Research Centre, European Commission: JRC Publications Repository Arctic Environmental Research Letters 14 3 034009
institution Open Polar
collection Joint Research Centre, European Commission: JRC Publications Repository
op_collection_id ftjrc
language English
description Past reductions of anthropogenic aerosol concentrations in Europe and North America could have amplified Arctic warming. In the future the impact of air pollution policies may differ, because the major anthropogenic sources of atmospheric aerosols are increasingly located in Asia. In this study numerical experiments evaluating only direct aerosol effects on atmospheric temperatures indicate that, while reduced carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions weaken Arctic warming, direct radiative forcing effects by reductions of anthropogenic aerosol concentrations, additional to those obtained by lower CO2 emissions, can either amplify or diminish it. Interactions between regionally modified radiation in Asia and internal climate variability may differently initiate and sustain atmospheric planetary waves propagating into the Arctic. In a nonlinear manner planetary waves may redistribute atmospheric and oceanic meridional heat fluxes at the high latitudes and either amplify or diminish Arctic warming in 2050. Lower CO2 concentrations might apparently contribute to reduce the interactions between the Arctic system and the lower latitudes, thus reducing the influence of strong air quality measures in Asia on the Arctic amplification of global warming. While past and present air pollution policies could have amplified Arctic warming, in the future the effects from atmospheric pollution reductions are less certain, depending on the future CO2 concentrations, and requiring improved simulations of changing aerosol concentrations and their interactions with clouds in Asia and the Arctic. JRC.C.5 - Air and Climate
author DOBRICIC Srdan
POZZOLI Luca
VIGNATI Elisabetta
VAN DINGENEN Rita
WILSON Julian
RUSSO Simone
KLIMONT Zbigniew
spellingShingle DOBRICIC Srdan
POZZOLI Luca
VIGNATI Elisabetta
VAN DINGENEN Rita
WILSON Julian
RUSSO Simone
KLIMONT Zbigniew
Nonlinear impacts of future anthropogenic aerosol emissions on Arctic warming
author_facet DOBRICIC Srdan
POZZOLI Luca
VIGNATI Elisabetta
VAN DINGENEN Rita
WILSON Julian
RUSSO Simone
KLIMONT Zbigniew
author_sort DOBRICIC Srdan
title Nonlinear impacts of future anthropogenic aerosol emissions on Arctic warming
title_short Nonlinear impacts of future anthropogenic aerosol emissions on Arctic warming
title_full Nonlinear impacts of future anthropogenic aerosol emissions on Arctic warming
title_fullStr Nonlinear impacts of future anthropogenic aerosol emissions on Arctic warming
title_full_unstemmed Nonlinear impacts of future anthropogenic aerosol emissions on Arctic warming
title_sort nonlinear impacts of future anthropogenic aerosol emissions on arctic warming
publisher IOP PUBLISHING LTD
publishDate 2019
url https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC108148
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aaf8ee
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Global warming
genre_facet Arctic
Global warming
op_relation JRC108148
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aaf8ee
container_title Environmental Research Letters
container_volume 14
container_issue 3
container_start_page 034009
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