Authors
Arlene M Fiore, Vaishali Naik, Dominick V Spracklen, Allison Steiner, Nadine Unger, Michael Prather, Dan Bergmann, Philip J Cameron-Smith, Irene Cionni, William J Collins, Stig Dalsøren, Veronika Eyring, Gerd A Folberth, Paul Ginoux, Larry W Horowitz, Béatrice Josse, Jean-François Lamarque, Ian A MacKenzie, Tatsuya Nagashima, Fiona M O'Connor, Mattia Righi, Steven T Rumbold, Drew T Shindell, Ragnhild B Skeie, Kengo Sudo, Sophie Szopa, Toshihiko Takemura, Guang Zeng
Publication date
2012
Source
Chemical Society Reviews
Volume
41
Issue
19
Pages
6663-6683
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Description
Emissions of air pollutants and their precursors determine regional air quality and can alter climate. Climate change can perturb the long-range transport, chemical processing, and local meteorology that influence air pollution. We review the implications of projected changes in methane (CH4), ozone precursors (O3), and aerosols for climate (expressed in terms of the radiative forcing metric or changes in global surface temperature) and hemispheric-to-continental scale air quality. Reducing the O3 precursor CH4 would slow near-term warming by decreasing both CH4 and tropospheric O3. Uncertainty remains as to the net climate forcing from anthropogenic nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions, which increase tropospheric O3 (warming) but also increase aerosols and decrease CH4 (both cooling). Anthropogenic emissions of carbon monoxide (CO) and non-CH4 volatile organic compounds (NMVOC) warm by …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AM Fiore, V Naik, DV Spracklen, A Steiner, N Unger… - Chemical Society Reviews, 2012