Local air pollution from oil rig emissions observed during the airborne DACCIWA campaign
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Published:2019-09-10
Issue:17
Volume:19
Page:11401-11411
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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:
Brocchi Vanessa, Krysztofiak Gisèle, Deroubaix AdrienORCID, Stratmann Greta, Sauer DanielORCID, Schlager Hans, Deetz Konrad, Dayma Guillaume, Robert Claude, Chevrier Stéphane, Catoire ValéryORCID
Abstract
Abstract. In the framework of the European DACCIWA
(Dynamics–Aerosol–Chemistry–Cloud Interactions in West Africa) project, the
airborne study APSOWA (Atmospheric Pollution from Shipping and Oil platforms
of West Africa) was conducted in July 2016 to study oil rig emissions off
the Gulf of Guinea. Two flights in the marine boundary layer were focused on
the floating production storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel operating off
the coast of Ghana. Those flights present simultaneous sudden increases in
NO2 and aerosol concentrations. Unlike what can be found in flaring
emission inventories, no increase in SO2 was detected, and an increase
in CO is observed only during one of the two flights. Using FLEXPART (FLEXible PARTicle
dispersion model)
simulations with a regional NO2 satellite flaring inventory in forward-trajectory mode, our study reproduces the timing of the aircraft NO2
enhancements. Several sensitivity tests on the flux and the injection height
are also performed, leading to the conclusion that a lower NO2 flux
helps in better reproducing the measurements and that the modification of the
injection height does not impact the results of the
simulations significantly.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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