4.7 Article

Climate change penalty and benefit on surface ozone: a global perspective based on CMIP6 earth system models

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac4a34

Keywords

climate change; surface ozone; benefit; penalty; CMIP6; ESMs

Funding

  1. Action titled 'National Network on Climate Change and its Impacts-CLIMPACT'
  2. Public Investment Program of Greece, General Secretary of Research and Technology/Ministry of Development and Investments
  3. UK-China Research and Innovation Partnership Fund through the Met Office Climate Science for Service Partnership (CSSP) China as part of the Newton Fund
  4. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI [JP18H03363, JP18H05292, JP19K12312, JP20K04070]
  5. Environment Research and Technology Development Fund of the Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency of Japan [JPMEERF20202003, JPMEERF20205001]
  6. Arctic Challenge for Sustainability II (ArCS II), Program [JPMXD1420318865]
  7. Ministry of the Environment, Japan [MLIT1753]
  8. NERC through NCAS [R8/H12/83/003]
  9. Met Office Hadley Centre Climate Programme - BEIS
  10. Defra [GA01101]
  11. EU Horizon 2020 Research Programme CRESCENDO project [641816]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study analyzes the impact of climate change on surface ozone from a global modeling perspective and finds that surface ozone concentrations are expected to decrease in regions remote from pollution sources due to global warming, while they may increase in regions close to pollution sources.
This work presents an analysis of the effect of climate change on surface ozone discussing the related penalties and benefits around the globe from the global modelling perspective based on simulations with five CMIP6 (Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6) Earth System Models. As part of AerChemMIP (Aerosol Chemistry Model Intercomparison Project) all models conducted simulation experiments considering future climate (ssp370SST) and present-day climate (ssp370pdSST) under the same future emissions trajectory (SSP3-7.0). A multi-model global average climate change benefit on surface ozone of -0.96 +/- 0.07 ppbv degrees C-1 is calculated which is mainly linked to the dominating role of enhanced ozone destruction with higher water vapour abundances under a warmer climate. Over regions remote from pollution sources, there is a robust decline in mean surface ozone concentration on an annual basis as well as for boreal winter and summer varying spatially from -0.2 to -2 ppbv degrees C-1, with strongest decline over tropical oceanic regions. The implication is that over regions remote from pollution sources (except over the Arctic) there is a consistent climate change benefit for baseline ozone due to global warming. However, ozone increases over regions close to anthropogenic pollution sources or close to enhanced natural biogenic volatile organic compounds emission sources with a rate ranging regionally from 0.2 to 2 ppbv C-1, implying a regional surface ozone penalty due to global warming. Overall, the future climate change enhances the efficiency of precursor emissions to generate surface ozone in polluted regions and thus the magnitude of this effect depends on the regional emission changes considered in this study within the SSP3_7.0 scenario. The comparison of the climate change impact effect on surface ozone versus the combined effect of climate and emission changes indicates the dominant role of precursor emission changes in projecting surface ozone concentrations under future climate change scenarios.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available