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How will air quality effects on human health, crops and ecosystems change in the future?

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2019.0330

Keywords

air pollution; future climate projections; ozone; particulate matter; health and ecosystem effects; food security

Funding

  1. JPB Foundation
  2. New York State Energy Research and Development Authority
  3. National Science Foundation through the Long-Term Ecological Research Program
  4. National Science Foundation Research Training program
  5. IASS Potsdam by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research of Germany (BMBF)
  6. Ministry for Science, Research and Culture of the State of Brandenburg (MWFK)
  7. University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna
  8. Austrian Climate and Energy Fund through the Austrian Climate Research Program [ACRP11]
  9. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Columbia University

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Future air quality will be driven by changes in air pollutant emissions, but also changes in climate. Here, we review the recent literature on future air quality scenarios and projected changes in effects on human health, crops and ecosystems. While there is overlap in the scenarios and models used for future projections of air quality and climate effects on human health and crops, similar efforts have not been widely conducted for ecosystems. Few studies have conducted joint assessments across more than one sector. Improvements in future air quality effects on human health are seen in emission reduction scenarios that are more ambitious than current legislation. Larger impacts result from changing particulate matter (PM) abundances than ozone burdens. Future global health burdens are dominated by changes in the Asian region. Expected future reductions in ozone outside of Asia will allow for increased crop production. Reductions in PM, although associated with much higher uncertainty, could offset some of this benefit. The responses of ecosystems to air pollution and climate change are long-term, complex, and interactive, and vary widely across biomes and over space and time. Air quality and climate policy should be linked or at least considered holistically, and managed as a multi-media problem. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue 'Air quality, past present and future'.

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