Abstract

Abstract. Ozone (O3) is a secondary air pollutant that negatively affects human and ecosystem health. Ozone simulations with regional air quality models suffer from unexplained biases over Europe, and uncertainties in the emissions of ozone precursor group nitrogen oxides (NOx=NO+NO2) contribute to these biases. The goal of this study is to use NO2 column observations from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) satellite sensor to infer top-down NOx emissions in the regional Weather Research and Forecasting model with coupled chemistry (WRF-Chem) and to evaluate the impact on simulated surface O3 with in situ observations. We first perform a simulation for July 2015 over Europe and evaluate its performance against in situ observations from the AirBase network. The spatial distribution of mean ozone concentrations is reproduced satisfactorily. However, the simulated maximum daily 8 h ozone concentration (MDA8 O3) is underestimated (mean bias error of −14.2 µg m−3), and its spread is too low. We subsequently derive satellite-constrained surface NOx emissions using a mass balance approach based on the relative difference between OMI and WRF-Chem NO2 columns. The method accounts for feedbacks through OH, NO2's dominant daytime oxidant. Our optimized European NOx emissions amount to 0.50 Tg N (for July 2015), which is 0.18 Tg N higher than the bottom-up emissions (which lacked agricultural soil NOx emissions). Much of the increases occur across Europe, in regions where agricultural soil NOx emissions dominate. Our best estimate of soil NOx emissions in July 2015 is 0.1 Tg N, much higher than the bottom-up 0.02 Tg N natural soil NOx emissions from the Model of Emissions of Gases and Aerosols from Nature (MEGAN). A simulation with satellite-updated NOx emissions reduces the systematic bias between WRF-Chem and OMI NO2 (slope =0.98, r2=0.84) and reduces the low bias against independent surface NO2 measurements by 1.1 µg m−3 (−56 %). Following these NOx emission changes, daytime ozone is strongly affected, since NOx emission changes particularly affect daytime ozone formation. Monthly averaged simulated daytime ozone increases by 6.0 µg m−3, and increases of >10 µg m−3 are seen in regions with large emission increases. With respect to the initial simulation, MDA8 O3 has an improved spatial distribution, expressed by an increase in r2 from 0.40 to 0.53, and a decrease of the mean bias by 7.4 µg m−3 (48 %). Overall, our results highlight the dependence of surface ozone on its precursor NOx and demonstrate that simulations of surface ozone benefit from constraining surface NOx emissions by satellite NO2 column observations.

Highlights

  • Ozone (O3) is an air pollutant that affects human and ecosystem health (Lelieveld et al, 2015; Ainsworth et al, 2012)

  • We evaluate the impacts on surface NOx and O3 with independent in situ observations in Sect

  • We find that bottom-up soil NOx emissions are underestimated by a factor of 5–7 compared to previous studies

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Summary

Introduction

Ozone (O3) is an air pollutant that affects human and ecosystem health (Lelieveld et al, 2015; Ainsworth et al, 2012). It affects radiative forcing directly as a greenhouse gas (IPCC, 2013) and indirectly by impacting ecosystem carbon uptake via deposition (Sitch et al, 2007). Despite decreases in ozone concentrations in Europe starting from 2000 (Chang et al, 2017), peak ozone concentrations still exceed the World Health Organization (WHO) air quality guideline of 100 μg m−3 and the European long-term objective of 120 μg m−3 (EMEP/CCC, 2016). Visser et al.: OMI-derived NOx emissions: impacts on surface O3 tive (EEA, 2017) in 2015, and vegetation exposure thresholds were exceeded in large parts of the continent during this year, in southern and central Europe (Rouïl and Meleux, 2018)

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