Pollution transport from North America to Greenland during summer 2008

Ozone pollution transported to the Arctic is a significant concern because of the rapid, enhanced warming in high northern latitudes, which is caused, in part, by short-lived climate forcers, such as ozone. Long-range transport of pollution contributes to background and episodic ozone levels in the Arctic. However, the extent to which plumes are photochemically active during transport, particularly during the summer, is still uncertain. In this study, regional chemical transport model simulations are used to examine photochemical production of ozone in air masses originating from boreal fire and anthropogenic emissions over North America and during their transport toward the Arctic during early July 2008. Model results are evaluated using POLARCAT aircraft data collected over boreal fire source regions in Canada (ARCTAS-B) and several days downwind over Greenland (POLARCAT-France and POLARCAT-GRACE). Model results are generally in good agreement with the observations, except for certain trace gas species over boreal fire regions, in some cases indicating that the fire emissions are too low. Anthropogenic and biomass burning pollution (BB) from North America was rapidly uplifted during transport east and north to Greenland where pollution plumes were observed in the mid- and upper troposphere during POLARCAT. A model sensitivity study shows that CO levels are in better agreement with POLARCAT measurements (fresh and aged fire plumes) upon doubling CO emissions from fires. Analysis of model results, using ΔO₃/ΔCO enhancement ratios, shows that pollution plumes formed ozone during transport towards the Arctic. Fresh anthropogenic plumes have average ΔO₃/ΔCO enhancement ratios of 0.63 increasing to 0.92 for aged anthropogenic plumes, indicating additional ozone production during aging. Fresh fire plumes are only slightly enhanced in ozone (ΔO₃/ΔCO=0.08), but form ozone downwind with ΔO₃/ΔCO of 0.49 for aged BB plumes (model-based run). We estimate that aged anthropogenic and BB pollution together made an important contribution to ozone levels with an average contribution for latitudes >55° N of up to 6.5 ppbv (18%) from anthropogenic pollution and 3 ppbv (5.2%) from fire pollution in the model domain in summer 2008.

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Copyright Author(s) 2013. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.


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Author Thomas, J.
Raut, J.
Law, K.
Marelle, L.
Ancellet, G.
Ravetta, F.
Fast, J.
Pfister, Gabriele
Emmons, Louisa K.
Diskin, G.
Weinheimer, Andrew
Roiger, A.
Schlager, H.
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2013-04-10T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2025-07-15T21:28:20.303005
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:12472
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Thomas, J., Raut, J., Law, K., Marelle, L., Ancellet, G., Ravetta, F., Fast, J., Pfister, Gabriele, Emmons, Louisa K., Diskin, G., Weinheimer, Andrew, Roiger, A., Schlager, H.. (2013). Pollution transport from North America to Greenland during summer 2008. UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.org/ark:/85065/d7bk1d47. Accessed 30 July 2025.

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