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Climate Change classes 1
UQ 3 May 07 Cars and ozone
R: Ozone trends
R: More NO2 in cities
F: Particle filters
A: Traffic & immission analysis
UQ 2 Mar 07 Urban air
Climate change 2007 IPCC special
UQ 1 Nov Dec 06 Particles in air
Special: Oct. 2006 Communication
Nr 10 Sept. 2006 Africa's emissions
Nr 9 July 06 Air traffic
Special: June 06 Climate summit
Nr 8 April 2006 Ozone & N2 cycle
Nr 7 March 2006 Climate modeling
Nr 6 Feb. 2006 acid rain
Nr 5 Jan. 2006 oceanic sulfur
Special: Nov 05 Ozzy Ozone
Nr 4 Oct. 2005 light/satellites
Special: Sept 05 Cyclones
Nr 3 Sept. 2005 methane/energy
Special: July 05 Greenhouse Earth
Nr 2 June 2005 forest/aerosols
No 1 May 2005 vegetation/CO2
     
Research

Research A: Ozone Trends
(results from ACCENT)

Research in the ACCENT project on Atmospheric Composition Change has a strong focus on ozone in the troposphere and the boundary layer. The troposphere is the lowest layer in the atmosphere where all weather events take place. The boundary layer is about the lowest 1-2 km of air close to the ground, just the air we are breathing every day.
 

Ozone is not healthy. In high concentrations it is really harmful, for our respiratory tract and also for vegetation. An important reason for ozone formation is that emissions of nitrogen oxides (NO and NO2) are released into the air. In urban areas nitrogen oxides come primarily from road traffic and industry, on the oceans also from ships. But they have also natural sources like vegetation fires and lightning.
 

boundary layer

1. The planetary boundary layer is the tropospheric layer closest to the ground. © NOAA

ozone trends

2. Recent ozone trends from several northern hemisphere ground-based stations. Source: ACCENT, Answers to the Urbino Questions

In the engines of cars, trucks and busses it is so hot that atmospheric nitrogen (N2) is oxidised. Catalytic converters have helped a lot to reduce the emissions and to decrease ozone peak values. But the problem is by far not yet solved. However, it is not only nitrogen oxides, also the increase of methane and the concentration of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrocarbons in the atmosphere have impacts on the formation of background ozone.
 

The mountain peak of Zugspitze (German Alps) and Mace Head (observatory at a lonely place of the Irish coast) are two stations in Europe, where the air is usually clean and less influenced by cities. But the ozone level has been increasing here over the last two decades.
 

Mace Head

3. Mace Head (source: Mace Head Observatory)

Zugspitze

4. Zugspitze Observatory, Photo by: Maximilian Dörrbecker

This is partially because emissions of ozone precursors from human sources have been increasing globally in the second half of the 20th century. They are transported over long distances, for example as peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN). Now nitrogen oxides are decreasing in some industrialised countries, but a lot of ozone is still imported. We spoke about this and the transport in ACCENT magazine No 8: Background ozone and long distance transport of nitrogen oxides
http://www.atmosphere.mpg.de/enid/5og.html

But the figure also shows: Ozone production is a part in complex atmospheric chemistry and can vary from year to year and station to station.
In rural areas in United Kingdom concentrations were slightly decreasing.
 

Relevant amounts of nitrogen oxides are still formed in urban areas and reduction strategies are less successful than for other air pollutants. The partial reduction leads to the effect, that less ozone is destroyed by reactions with NO in the city, but there is still enough NO and NO2 to drive ozone formation. Therefore ozone increases in the city centres. Only drastic reductions would help to avoid this, but this is not yet achieved.
 

UK rural ozone trends

6. Time series of the maximum 8-hourly mean ozone concentrations monitored at a selection of long-running rural EMEP background sites in the United Kingdom between 1990 and 2003. Source: Derwent, 2006

Therefore ACCENT scientists say in the answers to the Urbino Questions:
“The effect on exposure of the population to ozone will be complex. Although one may initially be reducing the overall concentration field of ozone in rural areas by reducing precursor emissions, the increases within cities may actually increase the exposure to ozone of more of the population.”
 

globales Ozon und lokale Quellen

6. Local ozone consists of background ozone which can be due to chemicals imported from other continents like PAN and local production, which is to a major extent coming from traffic. Traffic produces NO or NO2. NO reduces ozone in the cities by reaction to NO2. NO2 forms ozone again under certain conditions. See also:
www.atmosphere.mpg.de/
enid/23c.html

 

The conclusion is: ozone peak values are decreasing, while background ozone is on the way to reach less healthy mixing ratios of 35-40 ppb in particular in the sunny and warm European South. This is also in a regime where ozone can have negative impacts on plant growth. It is not expected that there will be strong changes in the next 20 – 30 years.
 

7. Target, information and alarm values for ozone in concentrations [µg/m3] or mixing ratios [ppb].
 

ozone alarm values

In the part “Research B: More NO2 in cities” of this edition we will see, that by far not all ozone problems are imported in Europe. Cleaning technologies for cars like particle filters can even be sources of more nitrogen dioxide in the urban areas.


 

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last updated 11.12.2007 | © ACCENT - Atmospheric Composition Change 2013