Regional temperature change potentials for short-lived climate forcers based on radiative forcing from multiple models

We calculate the absolute regional temperature change potential (ARTP) of various short-lived climate forcers (SLCFs) based on detailed radiative forcing (RF) calculations from four different models. The temperature response has been estimated for four latitude bands (90–28◦ S, 28◦ S–28◦ N, 28–60◦...

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Main Authors: Aamaas, B., Berntsen, T., Fuglestvedt, J., Shine, K., Collins, Bill
Format: Journal Article
Published: Copernicus GmbH 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68071
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author Aamaas, B.
Berntsen, T.
Fuglestvedt, J.
Shine, K.
Collins, Bill
author_facet Aamaas, B.
Berntsen, T.
Fuglestvedt, J.
Shine, K.
Collins, Bill
author_sort Aamaas, B.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description We calculate the absolute regional temperature change potential (ARTP) of various short-lived climate forcers (SLCFs) based on detailed radiative forcing (RF) calculations from four different models. The temperature response has been estimated for four latitude bands (90–28◦ S, 28◦ S–28◦ N, 28–60◦ N, and 60–90◦ N). The regional pattern in climate response not only depends on the relationship between RF and surface temperature, but also on where and when emissions occurred and atmospheric transport, chemistry, interaction with clouds, and deposition. We present four emissions cases covering Europe, East Asia, the global shipping sector, and the entire globe. Our study is the first to estimate ARTP values for emissions during Northern Hemisphere summer (May–October) and winter season (November–April). The species studied are aerosols and aerosol precursors (black carbon, organic carbon, SO2, NH3), ozone precursors (NOx , CO, volatile organic compound), and methane (CH4). For the response to BC in the Arctic, we take into account the vertical structure of the RF in the atmosphere, and an enhanced climate efficacy for BC deposition on snow. Of all SLCFs, BC is the most sensitive to where and when the emissions occur, as well as giving the largest difference in response between the latitude bands. The temperature response in the Arctic per unit BC emission is almost four times larger and more than two times larger than the global average for Northern Hemisphere winter emissions for Europe and East Asia, respectively. The latitudinal breakdown likely gives a better estimate of the global temperature response as it accounts for varying efficacies with latitude. An annual pulse of non-methane SLCF emissions globally (representative of 2008) lead to a global cooling. In contrast, winter emissions in Europe and East Asia give a net warming in the Arctic due to significant warming from BC deposition on snow
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-680712018-07-17T01:57:05Z Regional temperature change potentials for short-lived climate forcers based on radiative forcing from multiple models Aamaas, B. Berntsen, T. Fuglestvedt, J. Shine, K. Collins, Bill We calculate the absolute regional temperature change potential (ARTP) of various short-lived climate forcers (SLCFs) based on detailed radiative forcing (RF) calculations from four different models. The temperature response has been estimated for four latitude bands (90–28◦ S, 28◦ S–28◦ N, 28–60◦ N, and 60–90◦ N). The regional pattern in climate response not only depends on the relationship between RF and surface temperature, but also on where and when emissions occurred and atmospheric transport, chemistry, interaction with clouds, and deposition. We present four emissions cases covering Europe, East Asia, the global shipping sector, and the entire globe. Our study is the first to estimate ARTP values for emissions during Northern Hemisphere summer (May–October) and winter season (November–April). The species studied are aerosols and aerosol precursors (black carbon, organic carbon, SO2, NH3), ozone precursors (NOx , CO, volatile organic compound), and methane (CH4). For the response to BC in the Arctic, we take into account the vertical structure of the RF in the atmosphere, and an enhanced climate efficacy for BC deposition on snow. Of all SLCFs, BC is the most sensitive to where and when the emissions occur, as well as giving the largest difference in response between the latitude bands. The temperature response in the Arctic per unit BC emission is almost four times larger and more than two times larger than the global average for Northern Hemisphere winter emissions for Europe and East Asia, respectively. The latitudinal breakdown likely gives a better estimate of the global temperature response as it accounts for varying efficacies with latitude. An annual pulse of non-methane SLCF emissions globally (representative of 2008) lead to a global cooling. In contrast, winter emissions in Europe and East Asia give a net warming in the Arctic due to significant warming from BC deposition on snow 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68071 10.5194/acp-17-10795-2017 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Copernicus GmbH fulltext
spellingShingle Aamaas, B.
Berntsen, T.
Fuglestvedt, J.
Shine, K.
Collins, Bill
Regional temperature change potentials for short-lived climate forcers based on radiative forcing from multiple models
title Regional temperature change potentials for short-lived climate forcers based on radiative forcing from multiple models
title_full Regional temperature change potentials for short-lived climate forcers based on radiative forcing from multiple models
title_fullStr Regional temperature change potentials for short-lived climate forcers based on radiative forcing from multiple models
title_full_unstemmed Regional temperature change potentials for short-lived climate forcers based on radiative forcing from multiple models
title_short Regional temperature change potentials for short-lived climate forcers based on radiative forcing from multiple models
title_sort regional temperature change potentials for short-lived climate forcers based on radiative forcing from multiple models
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68071