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Effect of changes in emissions and climate change on global air quality:

Air pollutants. Air pollution. Sources & Policies. GHGs. Effect of changes in emissions and climate change on global air quality: A study of the air quality co-benefits of GHGs mitigation.

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Effect of changes in emissions and climate change on global air quality:

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  1. Air pollutants Air pollution Sources & Policies GHGs Effect of changes in emissions and climate change on global air quality: A study of the air quality co-benefits of GHGs mitigation Yuqiang Zhang1, J. Jason West1, Meridith M. Fry1, Raquel A. Silva1, Steven J. Smith2, Vaishali Naik4, Zachariah Adelman1, Susan C. Anenberg3, Larry W. Horowitz4, Jean-Francois Lamarque5, Louisa Emmons5 1 Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. 2 Joint Global Change Research Institute. 3 US Environmental Protection Agency. 4 NOAA Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. 5 National Center for Atmospheric Research. 834285 • Introduction 4. Analysis 3. Preliminary Results s . Global and regional anthropogenic emissions Actions to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs) will benefit global and regional air quality through two mechanisms in the future: 1) directly through reductions in emissions of co-emitted air pollutants (short-term and local), and 2) indirectly by slowing the influence of climate change on air pollution (long-term and global). While a large literature discusses the impacts of climate change on air quality, through meteorological changes, biogenic emissions, and other factors, we focus on the co-benefits of GHG mitigation on air quality. Here we aim to quantify the global air quality benefits of GHG mitigation through these two mechanisms, in realistic future scenarios to 2100. We use the global chemical transport model MOZART-4 to simulate changes in ozone and fine particular matter (PM2.5) due to changes in co-emitted air pollutants and climate due to the GHG mitigation. We present results for the changes in global air quality due to GHG mitigation in 2030, 2050, and 2100. Global and regional Air Quality OC (Tg C/yr) PM2.5 concentration (population-weighted annual average) India East Asia East Asia Global Global North America North America Global Global Global North America North America North America India India India East Asia East Asia East Asia #1 Emissions Co-benefit #2 Meteorology Co-benefit Total Co-benefit SO2 (Tg SO2/yr) O3 concentration (population-weighted 6-month of average of 1-hr daily maximum) India a b c NO (Tg NO/yr) a: Total co-benefit; b: Emission co-benefit; c: Meteorology co-benefit • Over the long term, the global PM2.5 and O3 both decrease for all scenarios, reflecting the assumptions in the RCPs of a • cleaner world as economic well-being increases. • The air quality co-benefits of GHG mitigation are large—2.37 ug/m3 for PM2.5 and 8.11 ppb for O3, for the global • population-weighted concentrations in 2100. PM2.5 and O3 concentration changes in 2100 Connections between air quality and climate change, showing two mechanisms of co-benefits of GHG mitigation on air quality: #1 is immediate and local, #2 is long-term and global. Emissions Problems 1 • Anthropogenic changes of organic carbon and sulfur dioxide, due to GHGs mitigation, among different scenarios contribute • to the global and regional PM2.5 benefit. • Organic carbon and sulfur dioxide play different roles in different regions. • We use scenarios from the GCAM global energy economics model, developed as Representative Concentration Pathway Scenarios (RCPs) for the IPCC 5th Assessment report– a Reference Case and RCP4.5. • In GCAM, RCP4.5 differs from the Reference Case only in the application of a climate policy. Therefore, we simulate directly the effects of global GHG mitigation on co-emitted air pollutants. • Global meteorology for these future scenarios is from the GFDL general circulation model (AM3) simulations of RCP8.5 (with similar forcing as the Reference Case) and RCP4.5. 2. Methodology Methane and isoprene emission change on Tropospheric O3 burden ∆O3 burden (Tg /a-1) ISOP emission (Tg C/a-1) Methane concentration (ppb) Climate Change 2 PM2.5 Simulations Modeled in the study • Methane emissions changes likely contribute substantially effect the tropospheric ozone burden • Changes in isoprene emissions, due to meteorological changes, have a smaller influence on tropospheric ozone burden 5. Conclusions • The air quality co-benefits of global GHG mitigation are substantial. • The direct co-benefits via changes in co-emitted air pollutants (mechanism #1) appear much more important than the long-term influence via climate change (#2), even in 2100. • Co-benefits would likely be larger if the Reference Case scenario had not assumed decreased air pollution in the future. • Methane changes in these emissions scenarios are likely important in contributing to the tropospheric O3 burden change. • Future work will include assessing the global health impacts of these air quality changes, and meteorological and chemical downscaling of these results to the US using the WRF and CMAQ models. O3 • We will present the total co-benefits and those resulting from the two mechanisms as: • Total co-benefit: rcp45−erefm85 • Emission co-benefit: rcp45−erefm45 • Meteorology co-benefit: erefm45−erefm85 • The emission reductions due to the GHG mitigation have a large positive effect on both PM2.5 and O3, while the changing • meteorology has less influence. • Slowing future climate change increases O3 in remote areas, as increasing water vapor decreases the ozone lifetime. In • polluted regions, slowing climate change causes O3 to decrease due to decreasing temperature and biogenic emissions, and • other meteorological factors. Acknowledgements: This work was funded by an EPA STAR grant #834285, an EPA STAR Graduate Fellowship (MMF), the EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, and the Department of Energy Office of Science. Contact: jasonwest@unc.edu, www.unc.edu/~jjwest

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