Effects of black carbon mitigation on Arctic climate

We use the ECHAM-HAMMOZ aerosol-climate model to assess the effects of black carbon (BC) mitigation measures on Arctic climate. To this end we constructed several mitigation scenarios that implement all currently existing legislation and then implement further reductions of BC in a successively incr...

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Published in:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Main Authors: KÜHN Thomas, KUPIAINEN Kaarle, MIINALAINEN Tuuli, KOKKOLA Harri, PAUNU Ville-Veikko, LAAKSO Anton, TONTTILA Juha, VAN DINGENEN Rita, KULOVESI Kati, KARVOSENOJA Nico, LEHTINEN Kari
Language:English
Published: COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC121754
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-20-5527-2020
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spelling ftjrc:oai:publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu:JRC121754 2023-05-15T13:11:07+02:00 Effects of black carbon mitigation on Arctic climate KÜHN Thomas KUPIAINEN Kaarle MIINALAINEN Tuuli KOKKOLA Harri PAUNU Ville-Veikko LAAKSO Anton TONTTILA Juha VAN DINGENEN Rita KULOVESI Kati KARVOSENOJA Nico LEHTINEN Kari 2020 Online https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC121754 https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-20-5527-2020 ENG eng COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH JRC121754 2020 ftjrc https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-20-5527-2020 2022-05-01T08:21:16Z We use the ECHAM-HAMMOZ aerosol-climate model to assess the effects of black carbon (BC) mitigation measures on Arctic climate. To this end we constructed several mitigation scenarios that implement all currently existing legislation and then implement further reductions of BC in a successively increasing global area, starting from the eight member states of the Arctic Council, expanding to its active observer states, then to all observer states, and finally to the entire globe. These scenarios also account for the reduction of the co-emitted organic carbon (OC) and sulfate (SU). We find that, even though the additional BC emission reductions in the member states of the Arctic Council are small, the resulting reductions in Arctic BC mass burdens can be substantial, especially in the lower troposphere close to the surface. This in turn means that reducing BC emissions only in the Arctic Council member states can reduce BC deposition in the Arctic by about 30 % compared to the current legislation, which is about 60 % of what could be achieved if emissions were reduced globally. Emission reductions further south affect Arctic BC concentrations at higher altitudes and thus only have small additional effects on BC deposition in the Arctic. The direct radiative forcing scales fairly well with the total amount of BC emission reduction, independent of the location of the emission source, with a maximum direct radiative forcing in the Arctic of about −0.4 W m−2 for a global BC emission reduction. On the other hand, the Arctic effective radiative forcing due to the BC emission reductions, which accounts for aerosol–cloud interactions, is small compared to the direct aerosol radiative forcing. This happens because BC- and OC-containing particles can act as cloud condensation nuclei, which affects cloud reflectivity and lifetime and counteracts the direct radiative forcing of BC. Additionally, the effective radiative forcing is accompanied by very large uncertainties that originate from the strong natural variability of meteorology, cloud cover, and surface albedo in the Arctic. We further used the TM5-FASST model to assess the benefits of the aerosol emission reductions for human health. We found that a full implementation in all Arctic Council member and observer states could reduce the annual global number of premature deaths by 329 000 by the year 2030, which amounts to 9 % of the total global premature deaths due to particulate matter. JRC.C.5 - Air and Climate Other/Unknown Material albedo Arctic Council Arctic black carbon Human health Joint Research Centre, European Commission: JRC Publications Repository Arctic Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 20 9 5527 5546
institution Open Polar
collection Joint Research Centre, European Commission: JRC Publications Repository
op_collection_id ftjrc
language English
description We use the ECHAM-HAMMOZ aerosol-climate model to assess the effects of black carbon (BC) mitigation measures on Arctic climate. To this end we constructed several mitigation scenarios that implement all currently existing legislation and then implement further reductions of BC in a successively increasing global area, starting from the eight member states of the Arctic Council, expanding to its active observer states, then to all observer states, and finally to the entire globe. These scenarios also account for the reduction of the co-emitted organic carbon (OC) and sulfate (SU). We find that, even though the additional BC emission reductions in the member states of the Arctic Council are small, the resulting reductions in Arctic BC mass burdens can be substantial, especially in the lower troposphere close to the surface. This in turn means that reducing BC emissions only in the Arctic Council member states can reduce BC deposition in the Arctic by about 30 % compared to the current legislation, which is about 60 % of what could be achieved if emissions were reduced globally. Emission reductions further south affect Arctic BC concentrations at higher altitudes and thus only have small additional effects on BC deposition in the Arctic. The direct radiative forcing scales fairly well with the total amount of BC emission reduction, independent of the location of the emission source, with a maximum direct radiative forcing in the Arctic of about −0.4 W m−2 for a global BC emission reduction. On the other hand, the Arctic effective radiative forcing due to the BC emission reductions, which accounts for aerosol–cloud interactions, is small compared to the direct aerosol radiative forcing. This happens because BC- and OC-containing particles can act as cloud condensation nuclei, which affects cloud reflectivity and lifetime and counteracts the direct radiative forcing of BC. Additionally, the effective radiative forcing is accompanied by very large uncertainties that originate from the strong natural variability of meteorology, cloud cover, and surface albedo in the Arctic. We further used the TM5-FASST model to assess the benefits of the aerosol emission reductions for human health. We found that a full implementation in all Arctic Council member and observer states could reduce the annual global number of premature deaths by 329 000 by the year 2030, which amounts to 9 % of the total global premature deaths due to particulate matter. JRC.C.5 - Air and Climate
author KÜHN Thomas
KUPIAINEN Kaarle
MIINALAINEN Tuuli
KOKKOLA Harri
PAUNU Ville-Veikko
LAAKSO Anton
TONTTILA Juha
VAN DINGENEN Rita
KULOVESI Kati
KARVOSENOJA Nico
LEHTINEN Kari
spellingShingle KÜHN Thomas
KUPIAINEN Kaarle
MIINALAINEN Tuuli
KOKKOLA Harri
PAUNU Ville-Veikko
LAAKSO Anton
TONTTILA Juha
VAN DINGENEN Rita
KULOVESI Kati
KARVOSENOJA Nico
LEHTINEN Kari
Effects of black carbon mitigation on Arctic climate
author_facet KÜHN Thomas
KUPIAINEN Kaarle
MIINALAINEN Tuuli
KOKKOLA Harri
PAUNU Ville-Veikko
LAAKSO Anton
TONTTILA Juha
VAN DINGENEN Rita
KULOVESI Kati
KARVOSENOJA Nico
LEHTINEN Kari
author_sort KÜHN Thomas
title Effects of black carbon mitigation on Arctic climate
title_short Effects of black carbon mitigation on Arctic climate
title_full Effects of black carbon mitigation on Arctic climate
title_fullStr Effects of black carbon mitigation on Arctic climate
title_full_unstemmed Effects of black carbon mitigation on Arctic climate
title_sort effects of black carbon mitigation on arctic climate
publisher COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
publishDate 2020
url https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC121754
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-20-5527-2020
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre albedo
Arctic Council
Arctic
black carbon
Human health
genre_facet albedo
Arctic Council
Arctic
black carbon
Human health
op_relation JRC121754
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-20-5527-2020
container_title Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
container_volume 20
container_issue 9
container_start_page 5527
op_container_end_page 5546
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