4.7 Article

Summer ozone pollution in China affected by the intensity of Asian monsoon systems

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 849, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.157785

Keywords

Ozone; Asian summer monsoon; China; Transboundary transport; Future projection

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2020YFA0607803, 2019YFA0606800]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41975159]
  3. Jiangsu Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars [BK20211541]
  4. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research (BER), Earth and Environmental System Modeling program
  5. DOE by the Battelle Memorial Institute [DE-AC05-76RLO1830]

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Asian summer monsoon (ASM), including East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) and South Asian summer monsoon (SASM), has an important impact on surface ozone concentrations in China by changing large-scale circulations and transboundary transport. EASM and SASM have different effects on ozone concentrations in different regions, which are crucial for air pollution prevention and mitigation in China.
Ozone in the troposphere is harmful to human health and ecosystems. It has become the most severe air pollutant in China. Here, based on global atmospheric chemistry model simulations during 1981-2019 and nation-wide surface observations, the impacts of interannual variations in Asian summer monsoon (ASM), including East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) and South Asian summer monsoon (SASM), on surface O3 concentrations during June-July -August (JJA) in China are investigated. EASM intensity has a significant positive correlation with the surface O3 con-centration in south-central China (97.5 degrees-117.5 degrees E, 20 degrees-35 degrees N) with a correlation coefficient of 0.6. Relative to the weak EASM years, O3 concentrations in strong EASM years increased by up to 5 ppb (10 % relative to the average) due to the weakened transboundary transport of O3 resulting from the decrease in prevailing southwesterlies. SASM can be di-vided into two components. The one near East Asia has a similar relation with O3 in southern China (100 degrees-117.5 degrees E, 22 degrees-32 degrees N) as that of EASM. The other component of SASM is negatively correlated with surface O3 concentration in eastern China (110 degrees-117.5 degrees E, 22 degrees-34 degrees N) and the maximum difference in O3 concentrations exceeded 5 ppb (10 %) be-tween the strong and weak monsoon years, which can be explained by the O3 divergence caused by the anomalous southerlies blowing pollutants away from the northern boundary of eastern China. This study shows that the ASM has an important impact on the O3 concentrations in China, primarily through changing transboundary transport re-lated to the variability of large-scale circulations, which has great implications for air pollution prevention and mitiga-tion in China. Future projections of ASM suggests that the sustainable and medium development scenarios are the perfect pathways that can help to mitigate O3 pollution, while high social vulnerability and radiative forcing scenarios could enhance future O3 pollution in China.

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