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Modeling the Air Quality Impacts of Climate and Land Use Change in the New York City Metropolitan Area C. Hogrefe 1, K. Civerolo 2, J.-Y. Ku 2, B. Lynn.

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Presentation on theme: "Modeling the Air Quality Impacts of Climate and Land Use Change in the New York City Metropolitan Area C. Hogrefe 1, K. Civerolo 2, J.-Y. Ku 2, B. Lynn."— Presentation transcript:

1 Modeling the Air Quality Impacts of Climate and Land Use Change in the New York City Metropolitan Area C. Hogrefe 1, K. Civerolo 2, J.-Y. Ku 2, B. Lynn 3, J. Rosenthal 3, K. Knowlton 3, B. Solecki 4, J. Cox 4, C. Small 3, S. Gaffin 3, R. Goldberg 5, C. Rosenzweig 5, and P.L. Kinney 3 1 Atmospheric Sciences Research Center, State University of NY at Albany, 2 NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation, 3 Columbia University, 4 Hunter College, 5 NASA-Goddard Institute for Space Studies This project is supported by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under STAR grant R-82873301 Models-3 Users’ Workshop, October 20, 2004

2 The New York Climate and Health Project (NYCHP) Global Climate NASA-GISS GCM Regional Climate MM5, RAMS Air Quality SMOKE, CMAQ Public Health Risk Assessment Changing Regional Land Use / Land Cover SLEUTH, Remote Sensing, IPCC SRES Scenarios Changing Greenhouse Gas Emissions IPCC SRES Scenarios Changing Ozone Precursor Emissions IPCC SRES Scenarios Regional Climate MM5, RAMS Global Climate NASA-GISS GCM Air Quality SMOKE, CMAQ Changing Greenhouse Gas Emissions IPCC SRES Scenarios Changing Ozone Precursor Emissions IPCC SRES Scenarios Changing Regional Land Use / Land Cover SLEUTH, Remote Sensing, IPCC SRES Scenarios

3 GCM/MM5/CMAQ Model Setup GISS coupled global ocean/atmosphere model driven by IPCC “A2” and “B2” greenhouse gas scenarios MM5 was run on 2 nested domains of 108km and 36km over the U.S. Simulations periods : June – August 1993-1997 June – August 2023-2027 June – August 2053-2057 June – August 2083-2087 1996 U.S. Emissions processed by SMOKE and – for some simulations - scaled by IPCC scenarios BEIS2 for biogenic emissions and Mobile5b for mobile source emissions CMAQ 4.2 was run at 36km to simulate ozone CB-IV mechanism, no aerosols

4 Model Setup for LU Change Simulations Current and future land use scenarios were generated with the SLEUTH/Deltatron model as described by Solecki and Oliveri, J. Env. Manag. 2004 MM5 and CMAQ were run for a 4 km grid centered over NYC nested inside 108/36/12 km grids MM5 incorporated simulated changes in land use Simulations periods : July 5 – July 24, 1993 June 18 – July 4, 2056 Emission processing and CMAQ configuration identical to previous runs

5 Overview Model Evaluation (from Hogrefe et al., Atmos. Env., 2004) The GCM/MM5/CMAQ system captures synoptic- scale and interannual variability of summertime temperatures and ozone in the current climate Patterns of observed and predicted summertime average daily maximum ozone concentrations showed a correlation of 0.68, a bias less than 1 ppb and a mean gross error of 6 ppb Good agreement for the medium and high end between observed and predicted space-time cumulative distribution functions Good representation of the frequency and duration of extreme ozone events.

6 Future-Year Simulations Impact of climate change only Impact of climate change, changes in emissions, and changes in chemical boundary conditions Impact of changes in land use in the greater New York City metropolitan area

7 Summertime Average Daily Maximum 8-hr Ozone Changes for Multiple “Decades” (2020s, 2050s, 2080s) in the A2 Scenario (from Hogrefe et al., JGR, 2004, in press) 1990s Average2020s Change 2050s Change2080s Change CMAQ predicts an increase in average summertime daily maximum 8-hr ozone concentrations for future decades as a result of climate change alone for the A2 greenhouse gas scenario

8 Change in the Frequency and Duration of Extreme Ozone Events For Different IPCC-SRES Scenarios and “Decades” for the greater NYC Metropolitan Region CMAQ predicts an increase in the frequency and duration of extreme ozone concentrations for future decades as a result of climate change alone for the A2 and B2 greenhouse gas scenarios over the NYC metropolitan region

9 Effects of Changes in Climate (A2), Anthropogenic Emissions, and Boundary Conditions on the 4 th -Highest Daily Maximum 8-hr Ozone Concentration for the 2050s (from Hogrefe et al., JGR, 2004, in press) 1990s 4 th HighestClimate Effect Emission EffectBoundary Effect

10 Changes in Average Concentrations vs. Changes in Extreme Concentrations for the Greater NYC Metropolitan Area Changes in regional climate outweigh the effects of increased boundary conditions and increased anthropogenic emissions over the greater New York City metropolitan area when changes in the 4th-highest summertime daily maximum 8-hr O3 concentration are considered Ozone Increase (ppb) Average 4 th Highest

11 Land use categories in the greater New York City metropolitan area as simulated by Solecki and Oliveri (2004) for the 1990s (left) and 2050s A2 scenario (right). Forest (green), Agriculture (yellow), High Density Urban (red), Medium Density Urban (orange), Low Density Urban (pink), and Other (white).

12 Changed Land Surface Parameterizations in MM5 Parameter Commercial/ industrial/ transportation High-density residential Low-density residential % Tree/Gras/Impervious 14 / 34 / 5225 / 16 / 5933 / 35 / 32 Shortwave albedo (%) 12.911.814.5 Moisture availability (%) 11.912.916.8 Longwave emissivity (%) 94 93 Roughness length (cm) 20010060 Thermal inertia (cal cm -2 K -1 s -1/2 ) 0.0290.0300.032 Surface heat capacity (J m - 3 s -1 ÷ 10 5 ) 18.718.920.6

13 Changes in Episode-Average Daily Maximum Temperature (left) and PBL Height (right) Caused by Incorporating the Changes in Land Use Into a 20-day MM5 Simulation MM5 T with 2050s A2 Land Use Minus MM5 T with 1990s A2 Land Use for a 1993 Climate Episode MM5 PBL with 2050s A2 Land Use Minus MM5 PBL with 1990s A2 Land Use for a 1993 Climate Episode Changes in average daily maximum temperature and PBL height are always positive and are largely confined to the regions with largest land use change

14 Changes in Episode-Average Daily Maximum Wind Speed (left) and Cloud Fraction (right) Caused by Incorporating the Changes in Land Use Into a 20-day MM5 Simulation MM5 Speed with 2050s A2 Land Use Minus MM5 Speed with 1990s A2 Land Use for a 1993 Climate Episode MM5 CF with 2050s A2 Land Use Minus MM5 CF with 1990s A2 Land Use for a 1993 Climate Episode

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16 Changes in Episode-Average Daily Maximum O 3 Caused by Using the Changed Land Use MM5 Simulations for 20-day CMAQ Simulations in 1993 CMAQ O 3 with 2050s A2 LU MM5 Minus CMAQ O 3 with 1990s A2 LU MM5 While most areas exhibit increased episode-maximum O 3, some areas show decreases O 3 changes are largely confined to areas of land use and temperature changes

17 Changes in Episode-Maximum Ozone (in ppb) Caused by Using the Changed Land Use MM5 Simulations for 20-day CMAQ Simulations in 1993 (left) and 2056 A2 (right) CMAQ O 3 with 2050s A2 LU MM5 Minus CMAQ O 3 with 1990s A2 LU MM5 for a 1993 Climate Episode CMAQ O 3 with 2050s A2 LU MM5 Minus CMAQ O 3 with 1990s A2 LU MM5 for a 2056 Climate Episode While most areas exhibit increased episode-maximum O 3, some areas show decreases O 3 changes are not confined to areas of land use and temperature changes Average episode-average O3 change (non-water grid cells) is 1.5 ppb (1993, left) and 1.0 ppb (2056, right)

18 Summary CMAQ predicts an increase in average and extreme ozone concentrations for future decades as a result of climate change alone for two greenhouse gas scenarios Changes in regional climate outweigh the effects of increased boundary conditions and increased anthropogenic emissions over the greater New York City metropolitan area when changes in the 4th-highest summertime daily maximum 8-hr O 3 concentration are considered For the two selected episodes, projected land use change can have local impacts of comparable magnitude as the other factors considered in this study

19 Modeling Domain 36 km MM5/CMAQ domain and NYCHP 31- county area of interest around New York City About 400 ozone and temperature monitors in the entire domain About 20 ozone and temperature monitors in the 31-county area

20 Changes in Episode-Maximum Temperature (in degrees C) Caused by Incorporating the Changes in Land Use Into a 20-day MM5 Simulation in 1993 (left) and 2056 A2 (right) MM5 T with 2050s A2 Land Use Minus MM5 T with 1990s A2 Land Use for a 1993 Climate Episode MM5 T with 2050s A2 Land Use Minus MM5 T with 1990s A2 Land Use for a 2056 A2 Climate Episode Temperature change is almost always positive and is largely confined to the regions with largest land use change Average episode-average temperature change (non-water grid cells) is 0.6 C (1993, left) and 0.7 C (2056, right)


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