Abstract

Abstract. Tropospheric ozone (O3) is an important air pollutant that affects human health, ecosystems, and climate. The contributions of O3 precursor emissions from different geographical source regions to the O3 concentration can help to quantify the effects of local versus remotely transported precursors on the O3 concentration in a certain area. This study presents a “tagging” approach within the WRF-Chem model that attributes O3 concentration in several European receptor regions to nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions from within and outside of Europe during April–September 2010. We also examine the contribution of these different precursor sources to various O3 metrics and their exceedance events. Firstly, we show that the spatial distributions of simulated monthly mean MDA8 from tagged O3 source regions and types for late spring, summer, and early autumn 2010 varies with season. For summer conditions, O3 production is dominated by national and intra-European sources, while in the late spring and early autumn intercontinental transported O3 is an important contributor to the total O3 concentration. We have also identified shipping activities in the Mediterranean Sea as an important source of O3 for the Mediterranean countries, as well as the main contributor to high modelled MDA8 O3 concentration in the Mediterranean Basin itself. Secondly, to have a better understanding of the origin of MDA8 O3 exceedances, we compare modelled and observed values of MDA8 O3 concentration in the Po Valley and Germany–Benelux receptor regions, revealing that the contribution from local sources is about 41 % and 38 % of modelled MDA8 O3 during the exceedance days, respectively. By examining the relative contributions of remote NOx sources to modelled and observed O3 exceedance events, we determine that model underrepresentation of long-range O3 transport could be contributing to a general underestimation of modelled O3 exceedance events in the Germany–Benelux receptor region. Thirdly, we quantify the impact of local vs. non-local NOx precursors on O3 production for each European receptor region using different O3 metrics. The comparison between mean, MDA8 and 95th percentile O3 metrics accentuates the importance of large contributions from locally emitted NOx precursors to the high end of the O3 distribution. When we compare the vegetation and health metrics, we notice that the SOMO35 and AOT40 indexes exhibit rather similar behaviour, while the W126 index accentuates the importance of local emissions. Overall, this study highlights the importance of a tagging approach to quantify the contribution of local and remote sources to the MDA8 O3 concentration during several periods as well to different O3 metrics. Moreover, this method could be applied to assess different mitigation options.

Highlights

  • Tropospheric ozone (O3) is formed primarily during the oxidation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the presence of nitrogen oxides (NOx) and sunlight

  • We first briefly evaluate the ability of WRF-Chem to reproduce meteorological parameters using measurements from the Global Weather Observation (GWO) dataset provided by the British Atmospheric Data Centre (BADC) and observed O3 concentrations using the measurements included in AirBase, a European air quality database (EEA, 2017b)

  • We implemented a new chemical mechanism within the WRF-Chem model to account for source attribution of O3 from NOx

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Summary

Introduction

Tropospheric ozone (O3) is formed primarily during the oxidation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the presence of nitrogen oxides (NOx) and sunlight. Ground-level O3 is an important air pollutant that damages human health (Fleming et al, 2018) and vegetation (Mills et al, 2018) It affects the radiative forcing (e.g. Ramaswamy et al, 2001; Stevenson et al, 2013) and contributes to climate change. Fleming et al (2018) showed that the fourth highest daily maximum 8 h O3 (4MDA8) is more ubiquitous at urban sites than at non-urban sites This leads to a worsening of general air quality that, affects human health and ecosystems (Paoletti et al, 2014; Monks et al, 2015; WHO, 2017; Fleming et al, 2018; Mills et al, 2018). To improve the air quality in certain areas, it is important to know the extent to which different precursors (NOx and VOCs) contribute to tropospheric O3 concentrations

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