Ozone anomalies in the free troposphere during the COVID-19 pandemic

Abstract Using the CAM-chem Model, we simulate the response of chemical species in the free troposphere to scenarios of primary pollutant emission reductions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Zonally averaged ozone in the free troposphere during Northern Hemisphere spring and summer is found to be 5%–15...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical Research Letters
Main Authors: Bouarar, Idir, Gaubert, Benjamin, Brasseur, Guy, Steinbrecht, Wolfgang, Doumbia, Thierno, Tilmes, Simone, Yiming, Liu, Stavrakou, Trissevgeni, Deroubaix, Adrien, Darras, Sabine, Grainer, Claire, Lacey, Forrest, Müller, Jean-François, Shi, Xiaoqin, Elguindi, Nellie, Wang, Tao
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2021
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL094204
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Summary:Abstract Using the CAM-chem Model, we simulate the response of chemical species in the free troposphere to scenarios of primary pollutant emission reductions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Zonally averaged ozone in the free troposphere during Northern Hemisphere spring and summer is found to be 5%–15% lower than 19-yr climatological values, in good agreement with observations. About one third of this anomaly is attributed to the reduction scenario of air traffic during the pandemic, another third to the reduction scenario of surface emissions, the remainder to 2020 meteorological conditions, including the exceptional springtime Arctic stratospheric ozone depletion. For the combined emission reductions, the overall COVID-19 reduction in northern hemisphere tropospheric ozone in June is less than 5ppb below 400hPa, but reaches 8ppb at 250hPa. In the Southern Hemisphere, COVID-19 related ozone reductions by 4%–6% were masked by comparable ozone increases due to other changes in 2020.