Quantitative impacts of meteorology and precursor emission changes on the long-term trend of ambient ozone over the Pearl River Delta, China, and implications for ozone control strategy

<p>China is experiencing increasingly serious ambient ozone pollution, including the economically developed Pearl River Delta (PRD) region. However, the underlying reasons for the ozone increase remain largely unclear, leading to perplexity regarding formulating effective ozone control strateg...

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Main Authors: L. Yang, H. Luo, Z. Yuan, J. Zheng, Z. Huang, C. Li, X. Lin, P. K. K. Louie, D. Chen, Y. Bian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2019-10-01
Series:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Online Access:https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/12901/2019/acp-19-12901-2019.pdf
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language English
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author L. Yang
H. Luo
Z. Yuan
J. Zheng
Z. Huang
C. Li
X. Lin
P. K. K. Louie
D. Chen
Y. Bian
spellingShingle L. Yang
H. Luo
Z. Yuan
J. Zheng
Z. Huang
C. Li
X. Lin
P. K. K. Louie
D. Chen
Y. Bian
Quantitative impacts of meteorology and precursor emission changes on the long-term trend of ambient ozone over the Pearl River Delta, China, and implications for ozone control strategy
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
author_facet L. Yang
H. Luo
Z. Yuan
J. Zheng
Z. Huang
C. Li
X. Lin
P. K. K. Louie
D. Chen
Y. Bian
author_sort L. Yang
title Quantitative impacts of meteorology and precursor emission changes on the long-term trend of ambient ozone over the Pearl River Delta, China, and implications for ozone control strategy
title_short Quantitative impacts of meteorology and precursor emission changes on the long-term trend of ambient ozone over the Pearl River Delta, China, and implications for ozone control strategy
title_full Quantitative impacts of meteorology and precursor emission changes on the long-term trend of ambient ozone over the Pearl River Delta, China, and implications for ozone control strategy
title_fullStr Quantitative impacts of meteorology and precursor emission changes on the long-term trend of ambient ozone over the Pearl River Delta, China, and implications for ozone control strategy
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative impacts of meteorology and precursor emission changes on the long-term trend of ambient ozone over the Pearl River Delta, China, and implications for ozone control strategy
title_sort quantitative impacts of meteorology and precursor emission changes on the long-term trend of ambient ozone over the pearl river delta, china, and implications for ozone control strategy
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
issn 1680-7316
1680-7324
publishDate 2019-10-01
description <p>China is experiencing increasingly serious ambient ozone pollution, including the economically developed Pearl River Delta (PRD) region. However, the underlying reasons for the ozone increase remain largely unclear, leading to perplexity regarding formulating effective ozone control strategies. In this study, we quantitatively examine the impacts of meteorology and precursor emissions from within and outside of the PRD on the evolution of ozone during the past decade by developing a statistical analysis framework combining meteorological adjustment and source apportionment. We found that meteorological conditions mitigated ozone increase, and that their variation can account for a maximum of 15&thinsp;% of the annual ozone concentration in the PRD. Precursor emissions from outside the PRD (“nonlocal”) have the largest contribution to ambient ozone in the region and show a consistently increasing trend, whereas emissions from within the PRD (“local”) show a significant spatial heterogeneity and play a more important role during ozone episodes over the southwest of the region. Under general conditions, the impact on the northeastern PRD is positive but decreasing, and in the southwest it is negative but increasing. During ozone episodes, the impact on the northeastern PRD is negative and decreasing, whereas in the southwestern PRD it is positive but decreasing. The central and western PRD are the only areas with an increasing local ozone contribution. The spatial heterogeneity in both the local ozone contribution and its trend under general conditions and during ozone episodes is well interpreted by a conceptual diagram that collectively takes ozone precursor emissions and their changing trends, ozone formation regimes, and the monsoonal and microscale synoptic conditions over different subregions of the PRD into consideration. In particular, we conclude that an inappropriate <span class="inline-formula">NO<sub><i>x</i></sub>∕VOC</span> control ratio within the PRD over the past few years is most likely responsible for the ozone increase over southwest of this region, both under general conditions and during ozone episodes. By investigating the ozone evolution influenced by emission changes within and outside of the PRD during the past decade, this study highlights the importance of establishing a dichotomous ozone control strategy to tackle general conditions and pollution events separately. <span class="inline-formula">NO<sub><i>x</i></sub></span> emission control should be further strengthened to alleviate the peak ozone level during episodes. Detailed investigation is needed to retrieve appropriate <span class="inline-formula">NO<sub><i>x</i></sub>∕VOC</span> ratios for different emission and meteorological conditions, so as to maximize the ozone reduction efficiency in the PRD.</p>
url https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/12901/2019/acp-19-12901-2019.pdf
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spelling doaj-e4efbc3da70d4440a73e2104d5f0d4b92020-11-25T02:32:24ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242019-10-0119129011291610.5194/acp-19-12901-2019Quantitative impacts of meteorology and precursor emission changes on the long-term trend of ambient ozone over the Pearl River Delta, China, and implications for ozone control strategyL. Yang0H. Luo1Z. Yuan2J. Zheng3Z. Huang4C. Li5X. Lin6P. K. K. Louie7D. Chen8Y. Bian9School of Environment and Energy, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510006, ChinaSchool of Environment and Energy, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510006, ChinaSchool of Environment and Energy, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510006, ChinaInstitute for Environmental and Climate Research, Jinan University, Guangzhou 511443, ChinaInstitute for Environmental and Climate Research, Jinan University, Guangzhou 511443, ChinaInstitute for Environmental and Climate Research, Jinan University, Guangzhou 511443, ChinaSchool of Environment and Energy, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510006, ChinaHong Kong Environmental Protection Department, Wan Chai, Hong Kong SAR, ChinaGuangdong Environmental Monitoring Center, Guangzhou 510308, ChinaSchool of Environment and Energy, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510006, China<p>China is experiencing increasingly serious ambient ozone pollution, including the economically developed Pearl River Delta (PRD) region. However, the underlying reasons for the ozone increase remain largely unclear, leading to perplexity regarding formulating effective ozone control strategies. In this study, we quantitatively examine the impacts of meteorology and precursor emissions from within and outside of the PRD on the evolution of ozone during the past decade by developing a statistical analysis framework combining meteorological adjustment and source apportionment. We found that meteorological conditions mitigated ozone increase, and that their variation can account for a maximum of 15&thinsp;% of the annual ozone concentration in the PRD. Precursor emissions from outside the PRD (“nonlocal”) have the largest contribution to ambient ozone in the region and show a consistently increasing trend, whereas emissions from within the PRD (“local”) show a significant spatial heterogeneity and play a more important role during ozone episodes over the southwest of the region. Under general conditions, the impact on the northeastern PRD is positive but decreasing, and in the southwest it is negative but increasing. During ozone episodes, the impact on the northeastern PRD is negative and decreasing, whereas in the southwestern PRD it is positive but decreasing. The central and western PRD are the only areas with an increasing local ozone contribution. The spatial heterogeneity in both the local ozone contribution and its trend under general conditions and during ozone episodes is well interpreted by a conceptual diagram that collectively takes ozone precursor emissions and their changing trends, ozone formation regimes, and the monsoonal and microscale synoptic conditions over different subregions of the PRD into consideration. In particular, we conclude that an inappropriate <span class="inline-formula">NO<sub><i>x</i></sub>∕VOC</span> control ratio within the PRD over the past few years is most likely responsible for the ozone increase over southwest of this region, both under general conditions and during ozone episodes. By investigating the ozone evolution influenced by emission changes within and outside of the PRD during the past decade, this study highlights the importance of establishing a dichotomous ozone control strategy to tackle general conditions and pollution events separately. <span class="inline-formula">NO<sub><i>x</i></sub></span> emission control should be further strengthened to alleviate the peak ozone level during episodes. Detailed investigation is needed to retrieve appropriate <span class="inline-formula">NO<sub><i>x</i></sub>∕VOC</span> ratios for different emission and meteorological conditions, so as to maximize the ozone reduction efficiency in the PRD.</p>https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/12901/2019/acp-19-12901-2019.pdf