Newly identified atmospheric circulation enhances heatwaves and wildfires around the Arctic

Phys.org  June 2, 2021
An international team of researchers (Japan, USA – NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, South Korea) assessed comprehensive air pollution (PM2.5) in the Arctic for the past 15 years to clarify the relationships between variations in PM2.5 and aerosols, wildfires, and the relevant climate patterns. They found 13 out of the 20 months with highest PM2.5 in the Arctic during the 15-year period were in summer. The elevated PM2.5 levels were highly correlated with relatively higher organic carbon aerosol concentrations, implying active wildfires. In those months, the wildfires likely occurred under extremely warm and dry conditions. Those were due to concomitantly persistent or developed high-pressure systems over Europe, Siberia, and subpolar North America, namely, Alaska and Canada…Open Access TECHNICAL ARTICLE

The relationships among CAW, heatwaves, wildfires, and pollution…Credit: Environmental Research Letters. May 17, 2021.

Posted in Global warming remediation and tagged , , .

Leave a Reply