Abstract

AbstractThe field observations imply that the long‐range transport of carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted by biomass burning (BB) in Southeast Asia might impact the atmospheric CO2 in South China, while the transboundary path and the contributions of long‐range transport on atmospheric CO2 concentrations in South China remain poorly understood. In this study, a regional air quality model system (RAQMS) was developed by incorporating the atmospheric process of CO2 to investigate the impacts of BB in Southeast Asia on tropospheric CO2 concentration over South China in spring during 2009–2018. CO2 emissions from BB in Southeast Asia in spring varied greatly from 2009 to 2018, and high monthly mean emissions were concentrated in the west of Myanmar, the border between Myanmar, Thailand and Laos, the north of Laos, and Cambodia, with the maximum reaching 1.0 g m−2 hr−1. Higher monthly mean concentrations of near surface CO2 and tropospheric CO2 produced by BB were mainly distributed in the source regions of Southeast Asia and South China. The monthly mean tropospheric CO2 concentrations produced by BB in Southeast Asia were higher in March 2010, 2014, and 2015, which were obviously related to the interannual variation of BB emission, and affected by the atmospheric circulation as well. The contribution of BB emission in Southeast Asia to the net change of tropospheric CO2 concentration in South China presented a belt distribution from the southwest to the northeast, with a domain average of 5.7%–38.6% over South China in March 2009–2018.

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