Sensitivity of Radiative Forcing from Biomass Burning Aerosols and Ozone to Emission Location
Publication Year
2007
Type
Journal Article
Journal
Geophys. Res. Lett.
Volume
34
Start Page
L03818
Documents
Full text
[1] Biomass burning is a major source of air pollutants, some of which are also climate forcing agents. We investigate the sensitivity of direct radiative forcing due to tropospheric ozone and aerosols (carbonaceous and sulfate) to a marginal reduction in their (or their precursor) emissions from major biomass burning regions. We find that the largest negative global forcing is for 10% emission reductions in tropical regions, including Africa (4.1 mWm2 from gas and 4.1 mWm2 from aerosols), and South America (3.0 mWm2 from gas and 2.8 mWm2 from aerosols). We estimate that a unit reduction in the amount of biomass burned in India produces the largest negative ozone and aerosol forcing. Our analysis indicates that reducing biomass burning emissions causes negative global radiative forcing due to ozone and aerosols; however, regional differences need to be considered when evaluating controls on biomass burning to mitigate global climate change.