1 / 23

Exceptional Events in North Carolina

Exceptional Events in North Carolina. Chris Misenis Meteorologist NC DENR – Division of Air Quality March 19, 2009. Overview. Exceptional Events ‘protocol’ Long Range Strategy 2007 Georgia Fire (Approved) 2007 Idaho / Montana Fires (Not Approved). Protocol.

gudrun
Télécharger la présentation

Exceptional Events in North Carolina

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Exceptional Events in North Carolina Chris Misenis Meteorologist NC DENR – Division of Air Quality March 19, 2009

  2. Overview • Exceptional Events ‘protocol’ • Long Range Strategy • 2007 Georgia Fire (Approved) • 2007 Idaho / Montana Fires (Not Approved)

  3. Protocol • Maintain an exceptional events mailing list • Fast response to ongoing events • Collect data as quickly and early as possible • Measurements, news stories, meteorological data • Conduct Analysis • QA procedures, trajectory work

  4. Distant Fires • More difficult to prove impacts than closer fires • Harder to show impacts from trajectories • But-For Analysis more difficult due to wider dispersion of smoke • Smoke becomes more difficult to spot on satellite images • Local wind speed becomes less important and trajectories become more important • V-smoke useless beyond ~100 miles

  5. Long Range Trajectory ‘Strategy’ • Smoke/air parcel that ultimately impacts a monitor could originate on various heights and days • Forward trajectories from fire • Release trajectories in 500m height increments from surface to 5000m every 3 hours • May have to start 10 or more days prior to impact for fires in Northwest US or Canada • Filter trajectories that come within 200 miles of monitor and are below 1500m (the top of the PBL on a sunny summer day)

  6. 2007 Georgia Fires

  7. Georgia Fires

  8. Georgia Fires • Impacts limited to southeast NC (Robeson County monitor in Linkhaw) • 36 μg/m3 exceedance on May 3, 2007 • But-For analysis ‘easy’, lower PM2.5 immediately to north/west

  9. Forward Trajectories 50m 100m

  10. Backward Trajectories 50m 100m

  11. Georgia Fires – EPA ruling EPA agreed with our analysis

  12. Idaho-Montana Fires NIFC large fires August 1, 2007

  13. Impacts in NC • 35-45 μg across central NC and much of southeast • But-For more difficult; PM2.5 outside of smoke was typical of a high summertime episode (~30 μg)

  14. Modis Satellite Smoke Aug 2

  15. Forward Trajectories

  16. Backward Trajectories Example: Hickory, NC

  17. Soundings and Profiler data PBL was nearly 2 km and any smoke at or below that level would have mixed down.

  18. Idaho Fires – EPA ruling EPA denied our EE request

  19. Thoughts • NC disagrees with EPA and feels the Idaho fires had some impact on PM2.5 • Readings were > 5 μg higher than any episode since 2002 (when forecasting began) • Trajectories and satellite clearly showed impacts • But-For failed because of regional ‘background’ episode

  20. Thoughts (continued) • We are not saying there was no PM2.5; the fires contributed ~ 10 μg • Probably need to use Calpuff or CMAQ to model impacts of fires • Would require time and $$$

  21. Recent Events • Evans Road Fire (2008)

  22. Evans Road Cont. Package may be composed entirely of pictures!

  23. Thanks! For more info: • Ambient Monitoring: • J.P. Chauhan: jp.chauhan@ncmail.net • Trajectory Analysis: • Nick Witcraft: nick.witcraft@ncmail.net

More Related