Ford B, Val Martin M, Zelasky S E, Fischer E V, Anenberg S C, Heald C L, Pierce J R
Department of Atmospheric Science Colorado State University Fort Collins CO USA.
Leverhulme Centre for Climate Change Mitigation, Department of Animal and Plant Sciences University of Sheffield Sheffield UK.
Geohealth. 2018 Aug 3;2(8):229-247. doi: 10.1029/2018GH000144. eCollection 2018 Aug.
Fine particulate matter (PM) from U.S. anthropogenic sources is decreasing. However, previous studies have predicted that PM emissions from wildfires will increase in the midcentury to next century, potentially offsetting improvements gained by continued reductions in anthropogenic emissions. Therefore, some regions could experience worse air quality, degraded visibility, and increases in population-level exposure. We use global climate model simulations to estimate the impacts of changing fire emissions on air quality, visibility, and premature deaths in the middle and late 21st century. We find that PM concentrations will decrease overall in the contiguous United States (CONUS) due to decreasing anthropogenic emissions (total PM decreases by 3% in Representative Concentration Pathway [RCP] 8.5 and 34% in RCP4.5 by 2100), but increasing fire-related PM (fire-related PM increases by 55% in RCP4.5 and 190% in RCP8.5 by 2100) offsets these benefits and causes increases in total PM in some regions. We predict that the average visibility will improve across the CONUS, but fire-related PM will reduce visibility on the worst days in western and southeastern U.S. regions. We estimate that the number of deaths attributable to total PM will decrease in both the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 scenarios (from 6% to 4-5%), but the absolute number of premature deaths attributable to fire-related PM will double compared to early 21st century. We provide the first estimates of future smoke health and visibility impacts using a prognostic land-fire model. Our results suggest the importance of using realistic fire emissions in future air quality projections.
美国人为源产生的细颗粒物(PM)正在减少。然而,先前的研究预测,野火产生的PM排放将在本世纪中叶至下个世纪增加,这可能抵消因人为排放持续减少而取得的改善。因此,一些地区的空气质量可能变差,能见度降低,人群暴露水平增加。我们利用全球气候模型模拟来估计21世纪中后期火灾排放变化对空气质量、能见度和过早死亡的影响。我们发现,由于人为排放减少,美国本土(CONUS)的PM浓度总体上将会下降(到2100年,在代表性浓度路径[RCP]8.5情景下总PM下降3%,在RCP4.5情景下下降34%),但与火灾相关的PM增加(到2100年,在RCP4.5情景下与火灾相关的PM增加55%,在RCP8.5情景下增加190%)抵消了这些益处,并导致一些地区的总PM增加。我们预测,美国本土的平均能见度将会提高,但与火灾相关的PM将降低美国西部和东南部地区最差日子的能见度。我们估计,在RCP4.5和RCP8.5情景下,归因于总PM的死亡人数都将减少(从6%降至4 - 5%),但与火灾相关的PM导致的过早死亡绝对数与21世纪初相比将增加一倍。我们使用一个预测性陆上火灾模型首次估计了未来烟雾对健康和能见度的影响。我们的结果表明在未来空气质量预测中使用实际火灾排放数据的重要性。