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Sensitivity of U.S. Surface Ozone to Future Emissions and Climate Changes

TitleSensitivity of U.S. Surface Ozone to Future Emissions and Climate Changes
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2007
AuthorsTao, Z., A. Williams, H. - C. Huang, M. Caughey, and X. - Z. Liang
JournalGeophysical Research Letters
Volume34
PaginationL08811
ISBN Number0094-8276
Keywords0345 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Pollution: urban and regional, 1630 Global Change: Impacts of global change, 1637 Global Change: Regional climate change, climate changes, emissions changes, SURFACE OZONE
Abstract

The relative contributions of projected future emissions and climate changes to U.S. surface ozone concentrations are investigated focusing on California, the Midwest, the Northeast, and Texas. By 2050 regional average ozone concentrations increase by 2–15% under the IPCC SRES A1Fi (“dirty”) scenario, and decrease by 4–12% under the B1 (relatively “clean”) scenario. However, the magnitudes of ozone changes differ significantly between major metropolitan and rural areas. These ozone changes are dominated by the emissions changes in 61% area of the contiguous U.S. under the B1 scenario, but are largely determined by the projected climate changes in 46% area under the A1Fi scenario. In the ozone responses to climate changes, the biogenic emissions changes contribute strongly over the Northeast, moderately in the Midwest, and negligibly in other regions.

URLhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2007GL029455
DOI10.1029/2007gl029455
Reference number

291

Short TitleSensitivity of U.S. Surface Ozone to Future Emissions and Climate Changes
Citation Key291