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Impacts of climate and emission changes on nitrogen deposition in Europe: a multi-model study.

Authors :
Simpson, D.
Andersson, C.
Christensen, J. H.
Engardt, M.
Geels, C.
Nyiri, A.
Posch, M.
Soares, J.
Sofiev, M.
Wind, P.
Langner, J.
Source :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics; 2014, Vol. 14 Issue 5, p6663-6720, 58p, 7 Charts, 6 Graphs, 7 Maps
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The impact of climate and emissions changes on the deposition of reactive nitrogen (Nr) over Europe was studied using four offline regional chemistry transport models (CTMs) driven by the same global projection of future climate over the period 2000- 2050. Anthropogenic emissions for the years 2005 and 2050 were used for simulations of both present and future periods in order to isolate the impact of climate change, hemispheric boundary conditions and emissions, and to assess the robustness of the result across the different models. The results from these four CTMs clearly show that the main driver of future N deposition changes is the specified emission change. Under the specified emission scenario for 2050, emissions of oxidised nitrogen were reduced substantially, whereas emissions of NH<subscript>3</subscript> increase to some extent, and these changes are largely reflected in the modelled concentrations and depositions. The lack of sulphur and oxidised nitrogen in the future atmosphere results in a much larger fraction of NHx being present in the form of gaseous ammonia. Predictions for wet and total deposition were broadly consistent, although the three fine-scale models resolve European emission areas and changes better than the hemispheric-scale model. The biggest difference in the models is for predictions of individual N-compounds. One model (EMEP) was used to explore changes in critical 20 loads, also in conjunction with speculative climate-induced increases in NH3 emissions. These calculations suggest that the area of ecosystems which exceed critical loads is reduced from 64% for year 2005 emissions levels to 50% for currently estimated 2050 levels. A possible climate-induced increase in NH3 emissions could worsen the situation, with areas exceeded increasing again to 57%(for a 30%NH3 emission increase). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16807316
Volume :
14
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
94991920
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/acpd-14-6663-2014