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Chemical regimes over Europe – long term , seasonal and day to day variability. Matthias Beekmann LISA University Paris 7 and 12, CNRS Créteil, France. Thanks to Robert Vautard for discussions and MM5 data. VOC sensitive regime:
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Chemical regimes over Europe – long term , seasonal and day to day variability Matthias Beekmann LISA University Paris 7 and 12, CNRS Créteil, France Thanks to Robert Vautard for discussions and MM5 data
VOC sensitive regime: VOC emission reductions more favorable for ozone reduction Near intense anthropogenic emission sources Low VOC / NOx emission ratio Weak actinic flux Radical chain terminationNO2 + OH -> ….RCOO2 + NO2 -> …. RO2 + NO -> …. NOx sensitive regime : NOx emission reductions more favorable for ozone reduction Rurales areas High VOC / NOx emission ratio Strong actinic flux Radical chain terminationHO2 + HO2 -> ….RO2 + HO2 -> …. Definitions INTRODUCTION Environmental conditions Chemical cycles
PLAN Many older studies, but no comprehensive work addressing: • Differences in chemical regimes with respect to target • Interannual, seasonal variability • Day to day variability, which forcings ? • Long term variability (decades) • Dependency to model configuration
CHIMERE CHEMISTRY-TRANSPORT MODEL Developed by: IPSL, LISA /CNRS, INERIS [http://euler.lmd.polytechnique.fr/chimere] Model domain : 10°W-23°E, 35°-58°N Horizontal resolution : 0.5° x 0.5° Vertical resolution:8 layers in hybrid pressure coordinates Pk=akptop + bkpsurf; ptop=500 mbar Chemical mechanism:reduced MELCHIOR ( 44 species, 120 reactions) here use of gas phase only Meteorology:MM5 driven by NCEP Reanalysis or Forecast Emissions:EMEP NOx,VOC, CO, SO2, 10 SNAP sectors; res. 50x50 km Biogenic emissions of isoprene, pinene and NO Boundary conditions: LMD-Z/INCA , MOZART , GOCART (PM)
ResultsReference simulation • Daily O3 maximum • Surface = 0 – 50 m • Average over • May – August • 2001 2002 2003
Chemical Regime = NOx -30 % minus VOC -30% emission scenario
Chemical Regime Emissions Industrial NOx emissions 1010 mol. cm-2 s-1 => Strong dependence of chem. regime on emission strength, modulated by meteorology
Chemical regimes for different targets • Daily O3 max.=> basic pollution indicator • Daily OX max. OX = O3 + NO2 => normalises out O3 titration by NO • AOT60 Shours max [O3 – 60 ppb, 0]=> climatological health index • AOT90 Shours max [O3 – 90 ppb, 0]=> pollution peak indicator • SUMO 35Sdays max [daily max O38h – 35 ppb, 0]=> climatological health index
Chemical regimes for different targetsmaximum daily OX concentration May – August 2001- 2003 average
Chemical regimes for different targetsSUMO35 May – August 2001 – 2003 integration/ average
Chemical regimes for different targetsAOT60 May – August 2001 – 2003 integration/ average
Chemical regimes for different targetsAOT90 May – August 2001 – 2003 integration/ average
Chemical regimes for different targetsConclusions General structure keeps unchanged irrespective of target : • NW EU VOC sensitive • SE EU NOx sensitive • North Italy NOx sensitive with exceptions • Shipping track VOC sensitive
Are these model results robust ? • Model has been evaluated with ozone measurements over Western Europe => Small bias, RMSE ~ 20% , R ~ 80% over WE • But no garantee, that sensitivity of PO3 to EVOC and ENOx is correct • Ideal solution: Monte Carlo simulations => give global uncertainty • Here sensitivity tests* EVOC + 40 %* other chemical mecanism: extended Melchior (~80 compounds, 320 reactions) instead of reduced one (40 compounds, ~120 reactions, operator approach)* look at model layer 2 (50 – 200 m) instead of layer 1 (0-50m) => regions with complex vertical structure
Robustness test O3max Many structures absent
The heatwave caseAugust 2003 O3max AOT90 O3max and AOT90 : NOx sensitive regime more extended
Day to day variability of chemical regimesO3max • Integration over the strongly VOC sensitive region in NW – Europe • From May to August 2001
Day to day variability of chemical regimesO3max • Chemical regime is always VOC sensitive over North-Western Europe • No dependency on ozone levels How can day to day variability be explained ?
Day to day variability of chemical regimesO3max O3 / NOz ratio Dependence on emission accumulation (NOy) Dependence on classical chemical regime tracers O3 / NOz ratio
Chemical regime for 1980 – 2020 emissions • Is the chemical regime expected to change for future emission scenarii ? • Did it change in the past ? => Use EMEP 1980 , 1990, 2010 and 2020 expert emissions in addition to 2002 one’s => No change in boundary conditions , trends not clear
Chemical regime for 1980 – 2020 emissionsO3max 1990 1980 2010 2020
Chemical regime for 1980 – 2020 emissionsAOT90 Year 1980 Year 2020
Conclusions • Chemical regime is (in CHIMERE European CTM)VOC sensitive over North Western Europe, NOx sensitive over Mediterranean region and Eastern Europe • This is robust with respect to :* target * model uncertainty * interannual, seasonal, day to day variability • Northern Italy : NOx sensitive, with exceptions (Milan area, …. exceptions not so robust) • Shipping emissions : VOC sensitive, but complex vertical structure • 1980 to 2020 emission changes drive system to more NOx sensitive in NW EU, in North Italy