4.6 Article

Recent Increased Loading of Carbonaceous Pollution from Biomass Burning in the Baltic Sea br

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 7, Issue 39, Pages 35102-35108

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.2c04009

Keywords

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Funding

  1. FORMAS
  2. Royal Physiographic Society
  3. Oscar and Lili La m m Foundation
  4. [2012-2140]

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Black carbon, SCP, and PAH are carbonaceous pollutants that have impacts on climate, environment, and human health. By measuring pollution levels in sediment sequences, we can extend our understanding of historical emission rates and observe the effects of changes in energy production on the delivery of carbonaceous pollution.
Black carbon (BC), spheroidal carbonaceous particles (SCP), and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) are carbonaceous pollutants affecting the climate, environment, and human health. International regulations limit their emissions, and the present emissions are followed by monitoring programs. However, the monitoring programs have limited spatio-temporal coverage and only span the last decades. We can extend the knowledge of historical emission rates by measuring pollution levels in radiometrically dated marine and lacustrine sediment sequences. Here we present measurements of BC, SCP, and PAH from a sediment sequence sampled in the O''resund strait, between Denmark and Sweden and dated back to CE 1850. Our data show a massive increase in the burial rates of all measured pollutants starting in the 1940s. The pollution deposition peaked in the 1970-1980s and declined through the 1990s. However, the declining trend was reversed in the 2000s. Source appointment of PAHs shows a relatively higher contribution of emissions from wood burning since CE 2000. This coincides with a change towards the increased use of biomass for both municipal and regional energy production in Scandinavia. Our results demonstrate that changes in energy production have caused changes in the delivery of carbonaceous pollution to marine environments. The increase in particle emissions from wood burning is potentially posing a future environmental and health risk.

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