Stratospheric Ozone Loss Enhances Summer Precipitation Over the Southern Slope of the Tibetan Plateau

Author:

Xia Yan12ORCID,Hu Yongyun3ORCID,Huang Yi4ORCID,Bian Jianchun256ORCID,Zhao Chuanfeng3ORCID,Lin Jintai3ORCID,Xie Fei1ORCID,Zhou Chunjiang7

Affiliation:

1. School of Systems Science Beijing Normal University Beijing China

2. Key Laboratory of Middle Atmosphere and Global Environment Observation Institute of Atmospheric Physics Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

3. Laboratory for Climate and Ocean‐Atmosphere Studies Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences School of Physics Peking University Beijing China

4. Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences McGill University Montreal Quebec Canada

5. College of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

6. College of Atmospheric Sciences Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

7. School of Ecology and Environment Inner Mongolia University Hohhot China

Abstract

AbstractHeavy summer precipitation over the southern slope of the Tibetan Plateau has dramatic influences on water resources and hydrological disasters in South Asia. It experienced increasing trends over 1979–1996 and decreasing trends over 1996–2022, which are not yet well understood. Here we show observational and numerical evidence that stratospheric ozone has significant impacts on long‐term trends of summer precipitation in this strong convection area. It is found that stratospheric ozone depletion, by modulating the lower stratospheric temperature and upper‐tropospheric static stability, enhances deep convection and precipitation over the southern slope of the Tibetan Plateau. The results suggest that the ozone recovery in the future may reduce the summer precipitation over the southern slope of the Tibetan Plateau in the first half of the 21st century, which would be imperative for future water resource management in South Asia.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Canadian Space Agency

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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