When it comes to Arctic air, various regions of the Northern
Hemisphere are equal opportunity polluters. Even some subtropical countries in
southern Asia get into the act, a new study
suggests.
Air pollution, especially that originating in large urban
areas, can affect air quality thousands of miles away (SN: 9/8/07, p. 152). Although much of the world’s population is in
temperate latitudes, atmospheric circulation often carries human-generated pollutants
to the high Arctic, says Drew T. Shindell, an atmospheric chemist at Columbia University. He and his colleagues recently
used a suite of 17 computer models to estimate how weather patterns sweep
pollution generated throughout the Northern Hemisphere to Arctic regions above
68°N. Those models included state-of-the-art simulations used in Britain, Europe and the United States, Shindell says.
The researchers scrutinized emissions coming from four
regions: Europe and North Africa (considered as one region), East Asia, South
Asia and North America. Altogether, these
areas account for about 75 percent of the emissions generated by human activity
in the Northern Hemisphere, Shindell says. In general, different levels of the
Arctic atmosphere receive pollution from different sources, the researchers
note in an upcoming Atmospheric Chemistry
and Physics. Also, they say, each
region’s relative contribution to Arctic pollution varies according to the
season.
The results suggest that most of the high Arctic’s low-level
air pollution — including its sulfate aerosols, black carbon soot and carbon
monoxide — originate in Europe. Much of the
low-altitude ozone in the region results from nitrogen oxides generated in
North America, but significant amounts of those gases come from Europe and East Asia as well, Shindell says. Most of the sulfate
aerosols and black carbon found at high altitudes — say, at heights of 5 to 8
kilometers — come from East Asia.
Short-lived, quick-reacting emissions often don’t survive
their trip northward, but slow-to-react emissions such as carbon monoxide can
waft all the way from southern Asia to the Arctic,
traveling thousands of kilometers.
Most of the carbon soot that taints the snow in low-altitude
regions of the Arctic comes from sources in Europe.
The soot that darkens high-altitude portions of the Greenland ice sheet,
however, comes from three sources: North America (40 percent), Europe (40 percent)
and East Asia (20 percent).
In winter, a dome of high pressure prevents most pollution
generated at low latitudes from sweeping into the Arctic
at ground level, the models suggest. Because much of Europe
lies within that dome, however, the continent’s contribution to Arctic
pollution during that season is particularly high.
Found in: Earth and Environment