Impacts
of Climate Change and Global Emissions on PM2.5 and Ozone Levels in the United
States: A Sensitivity Assessment and Development of an Integrated Modeling
Framework
Peter J. Adams*
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering; Carnegie
Mellon
University; 5000 Forbes Ave; Pittsburgh, PA 15213
Department of Engineering and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon
University, Pittsburgh, PA
John P. Dawson
Department of Engineering and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon
University, Pittsburgh, PA
Department of Chemical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University,
Pittsburgh, PA
Pavan Nandan Racherla
Department of Engineering and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon
University, Pittsburgh, PA
Barry H. Lynn,
Department of Atmospheric Sciences, The Hebrew University
of Jerusalem
Spyros N. Pandis
Department of Chemical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh,
PA
Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Patras, Patras, Greece
Future changes in climate and global pollutant
emissions provide additional challenges to air quality management in the
US. Changes in meteorological variables including temperature, clouds,
precipitation, wind speed, circulation patterns will impact PM2.5 and
ozone concentrations in the US via changes in chemical reaction and photolysis
rates, gas-aerosol partitioning, dry and wet deposition, pollutant transport,
and emissions of climate-sensitive species such as isoprene. Numerous
questions arise. How much will climate change affect US air quality over
the next half century? How will its impacts compare to those arising from
domestic emissions changes and intercontinental transport of pollution
globally? Which meteorological variables and physical processes are responsible
for most of the sensitivity? What are the associated uncertainties in
these projections? This talk will summarize answers to these questions
arising from a 4-year project undertaken by the authors using a variety
of modeling tools. Atmospheric models utilized in this research include
a global “unified” model of climate, ozone, and aerosols based
on the GISS general circulation model, the MM5 regional meteorological
model, and the PMCAMx regional chemical transport model. We have designed
a research program to draw on the respective strengths of the individual
models. For example, PMCAMx has been used to quantify the sensitivity
of ozone and PM2.5 to each of a full suite of meteorological variables.
We have used the GISS “unified” global model to perform multi-year
simulations of future air quality under a variety of realistic future
scenarios of climate, domestic and international emissions. Finally, we
have developed the Global-Regional Climate Air Pollution Modeling System
(GRE-CAPS) by integrating the GISS, MM5, and PMCAMx models. GRE-CAPS performance
has been evaluated against present-day observations and applied to study
the relative impacts of climate change, intercontinental transport, and
domestic emissions on US air quality in the 2050s decade.
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