Abstract

Abstract. Future trends in Arctic springtime total column ozone, and its chemical and dynamical drivers, are assessed using a seven-member ensemble from the Met Office Unified Model with United Kingdom Chemistry and Aerosols (UM-UKCA) simulating the period 1960–2100. The Arctic mean March total column ozone increases throughout the 21st century at a rate of ∼ 11.5 DU decade−1, and is projected to return to the 1980 level in the late 2030s. However, the integrations show that even past 2060 springtime Arctic ozone can episodically drop by ∼ 50–100 DU below the corresponding long-term ensemble mean for that period, reaching values characteristic of the near-present-day average level. Consistent with the global decline in inorganic chlorine (Cly) over the century, the estimated mean halogen-induced chemical ozone loss in the Arctic lower atmosphere in spring decreases by around a factor of 2 between the periods 2001–2020 and 2061–2080. However, in the presence of a cold and strong polar vortex, elevated halogen-induced ozone losses well above the corresponding long-term mean continue to occur in the simulations into the second part of the century. The ensemble shows a significant cooling trend in the Arctic winter mid- and upper stratosphere, but there is less confidence in the projected temperature trends in the lower stratosphere (100–50 hPa). This is partly due to an increase in downwelling over the Arctic polar cap in winter, which increases transport of ozone into the polar region as well as drives adiabatic warming that partly offsets the radiatively driven stratospheric cooling. However, individual winters characterised by significantly suppressed downwelling, reduced transport and anomalously low temperatures continue to occur in the future. We conclude that, despite the projected long-term recovery of Arctic ozone, the large interannual dynamical variability is expected to continue in the future, thereby facilitating episodic reductions in springtime ozone columns. Whilst our results suggest that the relative role of dynamical processes for determining Arctic springtime ozone will increase in the future, halogen chemistry will remain a smaller but non-negligible contributor for many decades to come.

Highlights

  • There was a period of rapid growth in the use of chlorofluorocarbons starting from the 1960s; it is well understood that these compounds, essentially inert in the troposphere, undergo photodegradation in the stratosphere and that their breakdown products initiate depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer (Molina and Rowland, 1974)

  • We examine the evolution of Arctic springtime ozone in the Met Office Unified Model with United Kingdom Chemistry and Aerosols (UMUKCA) chemistry–climate models (CCMs) (Morgenstern et al, 2009) using an ensemble of seven transient simulations carried out as part of the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) Stratospheretroposphere Processes and their Role in Climate (SPARC) chemistry–climate model initiative (CCMI; Eyring et al, 2013)

  • A similar long-term decline is modelled in the springtime Antarctic, where the ozone reduction is much larger in both absowww.atmos-chem-phys.net/16/12159/2016/

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Summary

Introduction

There was a period of rapid growth in the use of chlorofluorocarbons starting from the 1960s; it is well understood that these compounds, essentially inert in the troposphere, undergo photodegradation in the stratosphere and that their breakdown products initiate depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer (Molina and Rowland, 1974). Langematz et al (2014) studied the future evolution of Arctic ozone and temperature using a CCM They found that rising GHG concentrations lead to a cooling of the Arctic lower stratosphere in early winter but that there were no significant temperature changes in late winter or spring. We examine the evolution of Arctic springtime ozone in the Met Office Unified Model with United Kingdom Chemistry and Aerosols (UMUKCA) CCM (Morgenstern et al, 2009) using an ensemble of seven transient simulations carried out as part of the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) Stratospheretroposphere Processes and their Role in Climate (SPARC) chemistry–climate model initiative (CCMI; Eyring et al, 2013) This ensemble of simulations enables us to explore the year-to-year variability in Arctic polar ozone and its relation to the long-term trends in chemical and dynamical drivers over the 21st century.

The model
The CCMI REFC2 experiment
Diagnostics of chemical loss
Long-term evolution of polar total column ozone and Cly
Trends and variability in chemical drivers
Trends in Arctic stratospheric temperatures
Trends in VPSC
Trends in atmospheric circulation and transport
Case study of exceptionally low and average ozone events
Conclusions
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