Technical note: Northern midlatitude baseline ozone – long-term changes and the COVID-19 impact
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Published:2022-10-18
Issue:20
Volume:22
Page:13423-13430
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Parrish David D.ORCID, Derwent Richard G., Faloona Ian C.ORCID, Mims Charles A.
Abstract
Abstract. A nonlinear change in baseline ozone concentrations at
northern midlatitudes has been quantified over preceding decades. During the
past few years, several studies, using linear trend analyses, report
relatively small trends over selected time periods – results inconsistent
with the earlier developed picture. We show that reported COVID-19-related
ozone changes in the background troposphere based on the linear analysis are
significantly larger than those derived considering recent long-term
decreases in background ozone, which the linear trend analyses do not
quantify. We further point out that the extensive loss of lower
stratospheric ozone in the unprecedented 2020 springtime Arctic
stratospheric ozone depletion event likely reduced the natural source to the
troposphere, rendering the background anomalously low that year.
Consideration of these two issues indicates that the COVID-19 restrictions
had a much smaller impact on background tropospheric ozone in 2020 than
previously reported. A consensus understanding of baseline ozone changes and
their causes is important for formulating policies to improve ozone air
quality; cooperative, international emission control efforts aimed at
continuing or even accelerating the ongoing decrease in hemisphere-wide
background ozone concentrations may be the most effective approach to
further reducing urban and rural ozone in the more developed northern
midlatitude countries, as well as improving ozone air quality in all
countries within these latitudes. Analysis of baseline ozone measurements
over several years following the COVID-19 impact is expected to provide a
firm basis for resolving the inconsistencies between the two views of
long-term northern midlatitude ozone changes and better quantifying the
COVID-19 impact.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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