Siberian Arctic black carbon: gas flaring and wildfire impact
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Published:2022-05-06
Issue:9
Volume:22
Page:5983-6000
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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:
Popovicheva Olga B., Evangeliou NikolaosORCID, Kobelev Vasilii O.ORCID, Chichaeva Marina A., Eleftheriadis KonstantinosORCID, Gregorič AstaORCID, Kasimov Nikolay S.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. As explained in the latest Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP)
report released in early 2021, the Arctic has warmed 3 times more
quickly than the planet as a whole, as well as faster than previously thought. The
Siberian Arctic is of great interest mainly because observations are sparse
or largely lacking. A research aerosol station has been developed on
Bely Island (Kara Sea) in western Siberia. Measurements of equivalent black
carbon (EBC) concentrations were carried out at the “Island Bely” station
continuously from August 2019 to November 2020. The source origin of the
measured EBC and the main contributing sources were assessed using
atmospheric transport modeling coupled with the most updated emission
inventories for anthropogenic and biomass burning sources of BC. The obtained climatology for BC during the period of measurements showed an
apparent seasonal variation with the highest concentrations between December
and April (60 ± 92 ng m−3) and the lowest between June and September
(18 ± 72 ng m−3), typical of the Arctic haze seasonality reported
elsewhere. When air masses arrived at the station through the biggest oil
and gas extraction regions of Kazakhstan, Volga-Ural, Komi, Nenets and
western Siberia, BC contribution from gas flaring dominated over domestic,
industrial and traffic sectors, ranging from 47 % to 68 %, with a maximum
contribution in January. When air was transported from Europe during the
cold season, emissions from transportation were more important. Accordingly,
shipping emissions increased due to the touristic cruise activities and the
ice retreat in summertime. Biomass burning (BB) played the biggest role
between April and October, contributing 81 % at maximum in July.
Long-range transport of BB aerosols appeared to induce large variability to
the absorption Ångström exponent (AAE) with values > 1.0 (excluding outliers). As regards the continental
contribution to surface BC at the Island Bely station, Russian emissions
dominated during the whole year, while European and Asian ones contributed
up to 20 % in the cold period. Quantification of several pollution
episodes showed an increasing trend in surface concentrations and frequency
during the cold period as the station is directly in the Siberian gateway
of the highest anthropogenic pollution sources to the Russian Arctic.
Funder
Horizon 2020 Norges Forskningsråd Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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