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Applications and Evaluation of USEPA’s Models-3/CMAQ System: From Regional and Urban Air Pollution to Global Climate Change Carey Jang, Pat Dolwick, Norm Possiel, Brian Timin, Joe Tikvart U.S. EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards (OAQPS) Research Triangle Park, North Carolina OUTLINE Overview of USEPA’s “One-Atmosphere” Models-3/CMAQ Modeling System Applications and Evaluation of Models-3 /CMAQ System OAQPS Modeling Initiative on Intercontinental Transport and Climatic Effects of Pollutants Third-Generation Air Quality Models: U.S.EPA’s Models-3/CMAQ System “Open-Access” Community-Based Models : • User-friendly, Modular, Common modeling framework for scientists and policy-makers. Advanced Computer Technologies : • High performance hardware and software technologies (Cross-platform, GUI, distributed computing, visualization tools, etc.). “One-Atmosphere” Modeling : • Multi-pollutant (Ozone, PM, visibility, acid deposition, air toxics, etc.), Multi-scale. “One-Atmosphere” Management and Modeling Mobile Sources Ozone NOx, VOC, PM, Toxics PM (Cars, trucks, planes, boats, etc.) Industrial Sources Chemistry NOx, VOC, SOx, PM, Toxics (Power plants, refineries/ chemical plants, etc.) Area Sources NOx, VOC, PM, Toxics (Residential, farming commercial, biogenic, etc.) Acid Rain Meteorology Visibility Air Toxics Atmospheric Deposition Climate Change NOx-Related Air Quality Issues (NO3-, NH4+) (NOx + VOC + hv) --> PM Ozone NOx Acid Rain Visibility (NO3- deposition) (Fine PM) Water Quality (Nitrogen deposition, Lake Acidification) SOx-Related Air Quality Issues (Fine PM) (SO42-, NH4+) Visibility PM SOx Acid Rain Water Quality (SO42- deposition) (Lake acidification, Toxics deposition) . OH role in pollutants formation : One-Atmosphere PM2.5 VOC + OH ---> Orgainic PM Fine PM Visibility (Nitrate, Sulfate, Organic PM) Ozone . OH NOx + VOC + OH + hv ---> O3 Acid Rain Water Quality NOx + SOx + OH (Lake Acidification, Eutrophication) SOx [or NOx] + NH3 + OH ---> (NH4)2SO4 [or NH4NO3] SO2 + OH ---> H2SO4 NO2 + OH ---> HNO3 Air Toxics OH <---> Air Toxics (POM, PAH, Hg(II), etc.) Example of “One-Atmosphere” Modeling Impact of 50 % NOx Emission Reduction on PM 2.5 Impact of 50% NOx emission reduction Nitrate PM decrease Sulfate PM decrease Impact of 50% NOx emission reduction O3 decrease HOx decrease Formation of Secondary PM : Sulfate PM formation: H2SO4 + 2 NH3 ---> (NH4)2SO4 (s) Gas Phase: O2,H2O SO2 + OH ---> H2SO4 Aqueous Phase: H2O SO2 + H2O2 ---> H2SO4 (Dominate over low pH) SO2 + O3 ---> H2SO4 Oraginc PM formation: Nitrate PM formation: HNO3 + NH3 <---> NH4NO3 (aq,s) Gas Phase : Gas Phase : (daytime) VOC + OH ---> NO2 + OH ---> HNO3 Organic PM(semiGas &Aq Phase : (nighttime) volatile) N2O5 + H2O ---> HNO3 (Long-chain VOCs, Aromatics, Biogenic VOCs) Impact of 50% NOx emission reduction O3 decrease HOx decrease Impact of 50% NOx emission reduction Nitrate PM decrease Sulfate PM decrease Third-Generation Air Quality Models: U.S.EPA’s Models-3/CMAQ “Open-Access” Community-Based Models : • User-friendly, Modular, Common modeling framework for scientists and policy-makers. Advanced Computer Technologies : • High performance hardware and software technologies (Cross-platform, GUI, distributed computing, visualization tools, etc.). “One-Atmosphere” Modeling : • Multi-pollutant (Ozone, PM, visibility, acid deposition, air toxics, etc.), Multi-scale. Models-3/CMAQ System Framework Meteorology Processor or RAMS Emission Processor or SMOKE Air Quality Model PAVE Models-3/CMAQ Demo & Evaluation: USEPA/ORD Domain : Eastern U.S.A. Grid Resolution : 36-km/12-km/4-km (Nested Modeling) Episode : July 6 - 16, 1995 O3 Episode in the Northeast U.S. (7/12-15, 1995) Nested 4 km grid domain (144 x 147 cells) Measurement Sites and Terrain Features (Courtesy of USEPA/ORD, Daewon Byun) Model Predictions vs. Observations 160 120 ( E) O 3 (ppb) 25 01300 08 80 40 0 120 ob s. 04 km ( D ) 12 km 36 km 80 40 25 01300 03 0 ( C) 120 09 00310 03 80 40 0 120 ( B ) 80 40 09 00700 07 0 ( A ) 120 09 00911 23 80 40 0 19 EST 07 July 13 19 07 July 14 19 EST 07 July 15 19 Models-3/CMAQ Applications at EPA/OAQPS Western U.S. Application • Episodic O3, July 96, 36/12 km, Evaluation completed Annual Nationwide U.S. Application • 1-atmosphere, annual 1996, 36-km, evaluation & diagnostics, on-going annual 2000 Eastern U.S. Application • 1-atmosphere, July 95, urban applications, 36/12/4-km, emissions control & growth Intercontinental Transport/Air Quality & Climate Change • Intercontinental transport and climatic effects of air pollutants Models-3/CMAQ Modeling: Domain Maps 36 km western US ozone domain 36 km Annual National US domain Western U.S. Application Objectives : • New M3/CMAQ Domain • New Episode (July 1996) 177 Model Setup : • • • • • Episodic O3 modeling Meteorology : MM5 Emissions : Tier-2 regridded 36km/12km, 12 layers Compared against UAM-V 153 Modeled Observed O3 Conc. and Trend ( ppm & ppm / hr) Process Contribution to O3 (ppm / hr) Process Analysis : (Los Angeles grid) Diffusion Chem O3 Conc. dO3/dt Time Step (7/19 - 7/31/96) Western U.S. CMAQ Ozone Modeling BEIS3 Sensitivity Testing -- Western U.S. Annual Nationwide U.S. Application Features : • Annual CMAQ Run • Nationwide CMAQ Domain Model Setup : • • • • • Annual PM and O3 (1996) 36-km, 8 vertical layers Meteorology : MM5 Emissions Processing: SMOKE Model Evaluation: Compared against observed data (IMPROVE & CASTNET) & REMSAD NOx Emissions SO2 Emissions July 1, 1996 Models-3/CMAQ Simulation: Annual Average PM 2.5 Sulfate PM Nitrate PM Organic PM Models-3/CMAQ : Monthly Average (July) PM 2.5 Sulfate PM Nitrate PM Organic PM Models-3/CMAQ : Monthly Average (January) PM 2.5 Sulfate PM Nitrate PM Organic PM National 1996 CMAQ Modeling: CB4 vs. RADM2 Nitrate PM (Jan. 1996) Formation of Secondary PM : Sulfate PM formation: H2SO4 + 2 NH3 ---> (NH4)2SO4 (s) Gas Phase: O2,H2O SO2 + OH ---> H2SO4 Aqueous Phase: H2O SO2 + H2O2 ---> H2SO4 (Dominate over low pH) SO2 + O3 ---> H2SO4 Nitrate PM formation: HNO3 + NH3 <---> NH4NO3 (aq,s) Gas Phase : (daytime) NO2 + OH ---> HNO3 Gas &Aq Phase : (nighttime) N2O5 + H2O ---> HNO3 Oraginc PM formation: Gas Phase : VOC + OH ---> Organic PM(semivolatile) (Long-chain VOCs, Aromatics, Biogenic VOCs) NH3 Sensitivity Modeling Nitrate PM : (January Avg.) Base 50% NH3 reduction 0.62 0.70 0.09 1.69 0.08 0.53 1.16 1.24 Seasonal Average Total Nitrate* Concentrations Castnet Dry Deposition Network Annual CMAQ 1996 Modeling 18 CMAQ Predicted (ug/m3) 16 14 12 Summer 10 Fall Spring 8 Winter 6 4 2 0 0 2 4 *Total nitrate= Nitric acid + particulate nitrate 6 8 10 12 Castnet Observed (ug/m3) 14 16 18 National 1996 CMAQ Modeling: O3 (July Max in ppb) 149 56 99 62 134 76 137 107 215 132 139 126 131 127 144 113 194 119 National 1996 CMAQ Modeling: Visibility (January Average in Deciview) 18 11 16 19 14 9 16 26 10 9 24 26 15 22 12 22 26 24 24 14 23 National 1996 CMAQ Modeling (January average) Sulfur Wet Deposition Nitrogen Wet Deposition OAQPS Modeling Initiative on Intercontinental Transport and Climatic Effects of Air Pollution Air Pollution/Climate Change Modeling Initiative Background : O3 and PM are not only key air pollutants, but also major climateforcing substances; Reduction of non-CO2 substances (e.g., O3 and PM, especially black carbon) could be a viable alternative to CO2 reduction to curb global warming. A key strategy suggested was to focus on air pollution to benefit regional and local air quality and global climate simultaneously (Hansen et al., PNAS, 2000); Black carbon could be the second largest heating component after CO2 contributing to global warming; Control of fossil-fuel black carbon could be the most effective method of slowing glabal warming (Jacobson, Nature, 2001); Climatic Effects of Air Pollution O3 (0.3+0.1) Black (0.8) Carbon (Hansen et al., PNAS, 2001) “Kyoto Protocol also failed to address two major pollutants that have an impact on warming, black soot and tropospheric ozone. Both are proven health hazards. Reducing both would not only address climate change, but also dramatically improve people’s health.” (President Bush, June 12, 2001, New York Times) Air Pollution/Climate Change Modeling Initiative Background (continued): There is also mounting evidence that criteria pollutants originating from some developing countries, especially those in Asia such as China and India, could impact U.S. domestic air quality as well as contribute to the global background of climate-forcing substances. This intercontinental transport issue is expected to worsen with the rapid growth in emissions in these regions. For example, recent modeling studies showed that by 2020 Asian emissions could contribute as much as 2 ~ 6 ppb of O3 in the western U.S., offsetting the Clean Air Act efforts up to 25% in that region (Jacob et al., Geophys. Res. Letts., 1999) and increase global mean O3 level up to 10% (Collins et al., Atmos. Env., 2000); Asian and Sahara dust could contribute a significant amount of PM in the western and southeastern U.S. (Husar, http://capita.wustl.edu/CAPITA/). Asian Dust Storm Event: April 2001 (NASA/TOMS) (4/7) (4/9) (4/11) (4/12) (4/13) (4/14) Transport of CO : March 2000 (NASA/MOPITT) (3/10) (3/12) (3/13) (3/15) (Byun and Uno, 2000) Air Pollution/Climate Change Modeling Initiative Objectives : To assess available approaches for evaluating the linkage of air pollution to climate change and enhancing modeling capacity within EPA to address these linkage issues. To explore the impacts of intercontinental transport of O3 and PM as well as their implications for US domestic and regional air quality and global climate change To design integrated emissions control strategies to benefit global climate and regional and local air quality simultaneously Air Pollution/Climate Change Modeling Initiative Work Plan : Phase I : Short-Term (~6 months) Establish a better scientific foundation to address the issues related to intercontinental transport and climatic effects of air pollutants by leveraging current studies 1. Global Modeling of O3 and PM 2. Global Radiative Forcing of Aerosols 3. Emission Inventories for Climate-Forcing Pollutants Hold a “Workshop on Air Quality and Climate Change” and establish an expert advisory panel to provide guidance in developing a conceptual model and modeling protocol for Phase II work. Air Pollution/Climate Change Modeling Initiative Work Plan : Phase II - Long-Term (~2 years) Based on Phase I effort, a series of activities will be conducted. These efforts may include, but not limited to: 1. Support continued development of global and regional modeling capabilities for studying “policy-relevant” climatic effects of air pollution and the impacts of intercontinental transport 2. Improve global and regional emission inventories for global and regional modeling of O3 and PM 3. Develop nesting capability between global chemistry/climate models and regional air quality models 4. Simulate hemispheric or regional air quality under a variety of current and future global and regional emission scenarios 5. Evaluate global and regional air quality models using a diverse set of observational data sets, including data from satellites, surface networks, intensive field studies, etc 6. Assessment of the potential radiative forcing and climate benefits resulting from planned and alternative non-CO2 control strategies Air Pollution/Climate Change Modeling Initiative Models-3/CMAQ Run Example Ozone (ppm) 1998 April 11: 1200 UTC Trans-Pacific O3 simulation (Byun and Uno, 2000) 3D Tracer from Gobi Desert (MCNC, 2000) Charge Questions 1. Support continued development of global and regional modeling capabilities for studying “policy-relevant” climatic effects of air pollution and the impacts of intercontinental transport • Are there existing global/regional models that can be practically used for the assessment of these two issues simultaneously? • If not, which models are better for addressing the climatic effects of air pollution (global climate/chemistry model)? Which are better for addressing the impacts of intercontinental transport (global chemistry/regional air quality models)? 2. Improve global and regional emission inventories for global and regional modeling of O3 and PM • Are current global and regional EI sufficient for O3 and PM modeling? • If not, what are the weaknesses of exising regional/global EI? – O3 and PM precursors (NOx, SOx, VOC, NH3, etc.), black carbon? – Geographic distribution (Asia, America, Europe?) and resolution (global, regional, and urban)? – Source categories (biomass burning, biogenic emissions, domestic, mobile/point/area sources, etc.)? – EI modeling tools to convert EI to data needed for modeling? Charge Questions 3. Develop nesting capability between global chemistry/climate models and regional air quality models • Are the chemical boundary conditions sufficiently represented in regional air quality models? • Do global models have sufficient resolution to address regional impacts? • Is grid-nesting between global and regional models a good approach to bridge these gaps? 4. Simulate hemispheric or regional air quality under a variety of current and future global and regional emission scenarios • What current and future scenarios are to be simulated? – Emissions sensitivity scenarios (NOx, SOx, VOC, BC, CH4, etc.)? – Source categories sensitivity scenarios (fossil fuel, transportation, biomass burning, etc.)? – IPCC & LRTAP emission scenarios? – Climate change scenarios? Energy use scenarios? Charge Questions 5. Evaluate global and regional air quality models using a diverse set of observational data sets • What data sets are available for evaluating the model results? – Satellite and spacecraft? Surface network? Remote/Sentinel monitoring stations? Special field studies? – How to effectively use the observed data to evaluate against the model results? 6. Assessment of the potential radiative forcing and climate benefits resulting from planned and alternative non-CO2 control strategies • Can global climate models be used to estimate the climate-forcing effects of air pollutants? – How to account for the photochemistry of O3 and PM? • Can regional air quality models be used to estimate the climateforcing effects – How to translate changes in pollutant concentrations to climaticforcing? Can we assume changes in pollutant concentration is linear to changes in radiative properties? – How to extrapolate from regional-/hemispheric-scale modeling results to global-scale climate change?