World avoided simulations with the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model

Rolando R. Garcia, Douglas E. Kinnison, Daniel R. Marsh

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

36 Scopus citations

Abstract

We use the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model, coupled to a deep ocean model, to investigate the impact of continued growth of halogenated ozone depleting substances (ODS) in the absence of the Montreal Protocol. We confirm the previously reported result that the growth of ODS leads to a global collapse of the ozone layer in mid-21st century, with column amounts falling to 100 DU or less at all latitudes. We also show that heterogeneous activation of chlorine in the lower stratosphere hastens this collapse but is not essential to produce it. The growth of ODS, which are also greenhouse gases, produces a radiative forcing of 4Wm-2 by 2070, nearly equal that of the non-ODS greenhouse gases CO2, CH4, and N2O in the RCP4.5 scenario of IPCC. This leads to surface warming of over 2K in the tropics, 6K in the Arctic, and close to 4K in Antarctica in 2070 compared to the beginning of the century. We explore the reversibility of these impacts following complete cessation of ODS emissions in the mid-2050s. We find that impacts are reversed on various time scales, depending on the atmospheric lifetime of the ODS that cause them. Thus ozone in the lower stratosphere in the tropics and subtropics recovers very quickly because the ODS that release chlorine and bromine there (e.g., methyl chloroform and methyl bromide) have short atmospheric lifetimes and are removed within a few years. On the other hand, ozone depletion in the polar caps and global radiative forcing depend on longer-lived ODS, such that much of these impacts persist through the end of our simulations in 2070.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberD23303
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research
Volume117
Issue number23
DOIs
StatePublished - 2012

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'World avoided simulations with the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this