Contrail cirrus radiative forcing for future air traffic

13 views
Skip to first unread message

Andrew Lockley

unread,
Jun 30, 2019, 1:39:56 AM6/30/19
to geoengineering
Poster's note: relevant to cirrus cloud Thinning 

https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/8163/2019/

ACP | Articles | Volume 19, issue 12
Atmos. Chem. Phys., 19, 8163-8174, 2019
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-8163-2019
© Author(s) 2019. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. 

Research article | 27 Jun 2019

Contrail cirrus radiative forcing for future air traffic
Lisa Bock and Ulrike Burkhardt Received: 14 Dec 2018 – Discussion started: 25 Jan 2019 – Revised: 17 May 2019 – Accepted: 23 May 2019 – Published: 27 Jun 2019
Abstract 
top

The climate impact of air traffic is to a large degree caused by changes in cirrus cloudiness resulting from the formation of contrails. Contrail cirrus radiative forcing is expected to increase significantly over time due to the large projected increases in air traffic. We use ECHAM5-CCMod, an atmospheric climate model with an online contrail cirrus parameterization including a microphysical two-moment scheme, to investigate the climate impact of contrail cirrus for the year 2050. We take into account the predicted increase in air traffic volume, changes in propulsion efficiency and emissions, in particular soot emissions, and the modification of the contrail cirrus climate impact due to anthropogenic climate change.

Global contrail cirrus radiative forcing increases by a factor of 3 from 2006 to 2050, reaching 160 or even 180 mW m−2, which is the result of the increase in air traffic volume and a slight shift in air traffic towards higher altitudes. Large increases in contrail cirrus radiative forcing are expected over all of the main air traffic areas, but relative increases are largest over main air traffic areas over eastern Asia. The projected upward shift in air traffic attenuates contrail cirrus radiative forcing increases in the midlatitudes but reinforces it in the tropical areas. Climate change has an insignificant impact on global contrail cirrus radiative forcing, while regional changes are significant. Of the emission reductions it is the soot number emission reductions by 50 % that lead to a significant decrease in contrail cirrus optical depth and coverage, leading to a decrease in radiative forcing by approximately 15 %. The strong increase in contrail cirrus radiative forcing due to the projected increase in air traffic volume cannot be compensated for by the decrease in initial ice crystal numbers due to reduced soot emissions and improvements in propulsion efficiency.

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages