Abstract

Abstract. It is widely expected that global emissions of atmospheric aerosols and their precursors will decrease strongly throughout the remainder of the 21st century, due to emission reduction policies enacted to protect human health. For instance, global emissions of aerosols and their precursors are projected to decrease by as much as 80 % by the year 2100, according to the four Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) scenarios. The removal of aerosols will cause unintended climate consequences, including an unmasking of global warming from long-lived greenhouse gases. We use the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Coupled Climate Model version 3 (GFDL CM3) to simulate future climate over the 21st century with and without the aerosol emission changes projected by each of the RCPs in order to isolate the radiative forcing and climate response resulting from the aerosol reductions. We find that the projected global radiative forcing and climate response due to aerosol decreases do not vary significantly across the four RCPs by 2100, although there is some mid-century variation, especially in cloud droplet effective radius, that closely follows the RCP emissions and energy consumption projections. Up to 1 W m−2 of radiative forcing may be unmasked globally from 2005 to 2100 due to reductions in aerosol and precursor emissions, leading to average global temperature increases up to 1 K and global precipitation rate increases up to 0.09 mm day−1. However, when using a version of CM3 with reduced present-day aerosol radiative forcing (−1.0 W m−2), the global temperature increase for RCP8.5 is about 0.5 K, with similar magnitude decreases in other climate response parameters as well. Regionally and locally, climate impacts can be much larger than the global mean, with a 2.1 K warming projected over China, Japan, and Korea due to the reduced aerosol emissions in RCP8.5, as well as nearly a 0.2 mm day−1 precipitation increase, a 7 g m−2 LWP decrease, and a 2 μm increase in cloud droplet effective radius. Future aerosol decreases could be responsible for 30–40 % of total climate warming (or 10–20 % with weaker aerosol forcing) by 2100 in East Asia, even under the high greenhouse gas emissions scenario (RCP8.5). The expected unmasking of global warming caused by aerosol reductions will require more aggressive greenhouse gas mitigation policies than anticipated in order to meet desired climate targets.

Highlights

  • The climate effects of atmospheric aerosols represent one of the most uncertain aspects of current and future climate forcing and response estimates (Myhre et al, 2013)

  • All Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) assume an autonomous change in future air pollution control policies in every world region, resulting in sharp decreases in regional and global emissions of SO2, organic carbon (OC), and Black carbon (BC)

  • Since RCP2.6 projects the least warming from greenhouse gases, we find that this scenario is relatively the most susceptible to unmasked aerosol warming as well as aerosol-driven changes in precipitation, Liquid water path (LWP), and cloud droplet effective radius

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Summary

Introduction

The climate effects of atmospheric aerosols represent one of the most uncertain aspects of current and future climate forcing and response estimates (Myhre et al, 2013). On a global average basis, both the direct and indirect effects tend to exert a net negative radiative forcing on present-day climate, opposing the positive forcing from greenhouse gases, with the total aerosol effective radiative forcing estimated to be −0.9 W m−2 (uncertainty range −1.9 to −0.1 W m−2) (Myhre et al, 2013). This aerosol forcing has likely offset a significant portion of present-day CO2 and other greenhouse gas-induced climate forcing and subsequent global warming. We build upon the work of Levy et al (2013) to contrast the global and regional climate response and quantify the expected unmasking of warming due to future aerosol reductions across all of the RCPs

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