Affiliation:
1. CMA‐NJU Joint Laboratory for Climate Prediction Studies School of Atmospheric Sciences Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Climate Change Nanjing University Nanjing China
2. College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering Peking University Beijing China
3. Nanjing‐Helsinki Institute in Atmospheric and Earth System Sciences Nanjing University Nanjing China
4. School of Environment Nanjing Normal University Nanjing China
Abstract
AbstractIn the context of China's “dual carbon” goal, emissions of air pollutants are expected to significantly decrease in the future. Thus, the direct climate effects of black carbon (BC) aerosols in East Asia are investigated under this goal using an updated regional climate and chemistry model. The simulated annual average BC concentration over East Asia is approximately 1.29 μg/m3 in the last decade. Compared to those in 2010–2020, both the BC column burden and instantaneous direct radiative forcing in East Asia decrease by more than 55% and 80%, respectively, in the carbon peak year (2030s) and the carbon neutrality year (2060s). Conversely, the BC effective radiative forcing (ERF) and regional climate responses to BC exhibit substantial nonlinearity to emission reduction, possibly resulting from different adjustments of thermal‐dynamic fields and clouds from BC‐radiation interactions. The regional mean BC ERF at the tropopause over East Asia is approximately +1.11 W/m2 in 2010–2020 while negative in the 2060s. BC‐radiation interactions in the present‐day impose a significant annual mean cooling of −0.2 to −0.5 K in central China but warming +0.3 K in the Tibetan Plateau. As China's BC emissions decline, surface temperature responses show a mixed picture compared to 2010–2020, with more cooling in eastern China and Tibet of −0.2 to −0.3 K in the 2030s, but more warming in central China of approximately +0.3 K by the 2060s. The Indian BC might play a more important role in East Asian climate with reduction of BC emissions in China.
Funder
National Key Research and Development Program of China
Central University Basic Research Fund of China
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)