CLouds and Aerosol Radiative Impacts and Forcing: Year 2016 (CLARIFY-2016)

Lead Research Organisation: University of Exeter
Department Name: Mathematics

Abstract

Biomass burning aerosol (BBA) exerts a considerable impact on climate by impacting regional radiation budgets as it significantly reflects and absorbs sunlight, and its cloud nucleating properties perturb cloud microphysics and hence affect cloud radiative properties, precipitation and cloud lifetime. However, BBA is a complex and poorly understood aerosol species as it consists of a complex cocktail of organic carbon and inorganic compounds mixed with black carbon and hence large uncertainties exist in both the aerosol-radiation-interactions and aerosol-cloud-interactions, uncertainties that limit the ability of our current climate models to accurately reconstruct past climate and predict future climate change.

The African continent is the largest global source of BBA (around 50% of global emissions) which is transported offshore over the underlying semi-permanent cloud decks making the SE Atlantic a regional hotspot for BBA concentrations. While global climate models agree that this is a regional hotspot, their results diverge dramatically when attempting to assess aerosol-radiation-interactions and aerosol-cloud-interactions. Hence the area presents a very stringent test for climate models which need to capture not only the aerosol geographic, vertical, absorption and scattering properties, but also the cloud geographic distribution, vertical extent and cloud reflectance properties. Similarly, in order to capture the aerosol-cloud-interactions adequately, the susceptibility of the clouds in background conditions; aerosol activation processes; uncertainty about where and when BBA aerosol is entrained into the marine bundary layer and the impact of such entrainment on the microphysical and radiative properties of the cloud result in a large uncertainty. BBA overlying cloud also causes biases in satellite retrievals of cloud properties which can cause erroneous representation of stratocumulus cloud brightness; this has been shown to cause biases in other areas of the word such as biases in precipitation in Brazil via poorly understood global teleconnection processes.

It is timely to address these challenges as both measurement methods and high resolution model capabilities have developed rapidly over the last few years and are now sufficiently advanced that the processes and properties of BBA can be sufficiently constrained. This measurement/high resolution model combination can be used to challenge the representation of aerosol-radiation-interaction and aerosol-cloud-interaction in coarser resolution numerical weather prediction (NWP) and climate models. Previous measurements in the region are limited to the basic measurements made during SAFARI-2000 when the advanced measurements needed for constraining the complex cloud-aerosol-radiation had not been developed and high resolution modelling was in its infancy.

We are therefore proposing a major consortium programme, CLARIFY-2016, a consortium of 5 university partners and the UK Met Office, which will deliver a suite of ground and aircraft measurements to measure, understand, evaluate and improve:
a) the physical, chemical, optical and radiative properties of BBAs
b) the physical properties of stratocumulus clouds
c) the representation of aerosol-radiation interactions in weather and climate models
d) the representation of aerosol-cloud interactions across a range of model scales.
The main field experiment will take place during September 2016, based in Walvis Bay, Namibia. The UK large research aircraft (FAAM) will be used to measure in-situ and remotely sensed aerosol and cloud and properties while advanced radiometers on board the aircraft will measure aerosol and cloud radiative impacts. While the proposal has been written on a stand-alone basis, we are closely collaborating and coordinating with both the NASA ORACLES programme (5 NASA centres, 8 USA universities) and NSF-funded ONFIRE programme (22 USA institutes).

Planned Impact

CLARIFY-2016: Impact Summary

1. The Beneficiaries of the Research and how they will benefit from it:-

Scientific community:
CLARIFY will be of significant scientific interest nationally and internationally as evident by the synergistic proposed research under the NASA ORACLES (ObseRvations of Aerosols above CLouds and their intEractionS) and NSF ONFIRE (ObservatioNs of Fires Impact on the southeast atlantic REgion) proposals and the level of support from the Met Office. CLARIFY data will be placed on the BADC for use initially by project partners, but will be available to the entire community subsequent to completion of the project. Specifically:-
1) The ONFIRE consortium consists of a total of 22 US universities and research institutes who plan complementary measurements with the C-130 aircraft from Sao Tome Island (2000km north of Walvis Bay). CLARIFY measurements will provide vital cloud-aerosol-radiation observations in stratocumulus, rather than cumulus-dominated cloud regimes hence extending the geographical extent and applicability of their study. They will be granted access to bespoke Numerical Weather Prediction model forecasts, and CLARIFY data (ODMP), and will provide the same to CLARIFY in a reciprocal data sharing agreement.
2)The ORACLES consortium consists of 5 NASA Research Centres and 8 US universities. They plan deployment of the NASA P3 and ER-2 high altitude aircraft to Walvis Bay. They will benefit from intercomparison/validation of aircraft data, synergistic planning of the aircraft measurements with potential dual-aircraft flights planned, NWP forecasts and CLARIFY data (ODMP). They will provide the same to CLARIFY in a reciprocal agreement.
3) The AEROCOM community. There are 22 global atmospheric models/groups contributing to Phase II of AEROCOM who will benefit from a full range of validation data, and comparisons against an optimised version of HadGEM3.
4) Project partners in the satellite community; the provision of accurate aerosol microphysical properties, cloud retrievals and biases caused by overlying BBA will be utilised by the satellite community.

Operational Weather Forecasting Centres:
5) The Met Office will benefit from (i) sharing costs of aircraft deployment costs (ii) validation and improvement of satellite retrievals, Met Office large eddy simulation model (LEM), limited area and global NWP models, and the HadGEM3 climate model leading to better weather, seasonal forecasts, and climate projections at local, regional, and continental scales.
6)The South Africa Weather Service (SAWS) provides weather forecasts for southern Africa, using a licensed version of the Met Office limited area NWP model.
7) The European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasting (ECMWF, PP) will collaborate and benefit from provision of forecast validation data (see letter of support).

General public / media:
8) There has been significant publicity in recent years on aerosols, clouds and climate. However, there remains a significant lack of knowledge surrounding these issues and clear information needs to be conveyed to the public to enable greater appreciation of the uncertainties in regional and global climate prediction.
9) Improved forecasts by SAWS will improve NWP forecasts for southern Africa, while the global NWP model improvements will improve forecasts in other areas by better representing global teleconnections in weather patterns.

Policymakers:
10) There is considerable interest from policy-makers on the impacts of absorbing aerosol on the radiative forcing of climate with suggestions for black carbon emission reduction as a mitigation strategy to counter global warming. The measurements will lead to a greater knowledge of the impacts of black carbon-rich absorbing aerosol above reflective cloud over the SE Atlantic hot-spot. The measurement and modelling integration will provide policy makers with evidence for potential effectiveness of mitigation strategies.

Publications

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Bellouin N (2020) Bounding Global Aerosol Radiative Forcing of Climate Change. in Reviews of geophysics (Washington, D.C. : 1985)

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Haywood J (2016) Climate Change

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Myhre G (2020) Cloudy-sky contributions to the direct aerosol effect in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics

 
Description This research has provided the most comprehensive analysis of the climatic impacts of smoke from biomass burning to date. Specifically:-
1) It deployed the most accurate state-of-the-art aerosol absorption and extinction measurements enabling far greater constraints to be put on the absorption and scattering properties of biomass burning smoke aerosol.
2) It has highlighted the strengths and shortcomings in climate models. A particular weakness of climat emodel aerosol schemes is how smoke aerosol ageing is represented and how this impacts the climate via the absorption and scattering of sunlight and the impacts on cloud microphysics.
3) It has comprehensively shown that aerosol-cloud-interactions frequently occur over the SE Atlantic ocean.
4) It has developed satellite retrievals from geostationary platforms that ultimately will provide the most accurate estimates of the climatic impacts of biomass burning smoke aerosols.
Exploitation Route The measurements/modelling and satellite analyses are comprehensively analysed here:-

https://blogs.exeter.ac.uk/clarify2017/

The data is stored as per NERC propotocol here:-

http://catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/uuid/38ab7089781a4560b067dd6c20af3769

We would anticipate many further papers as the work is still ongoing.
Sectors Environment

 
Description CLARIFY-ORACLES-LASIC partnership 
Organisation Meteorological Office UK
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Biomass burning aerosols affect the climate in a combination of ways. The CLARIFY-2017 (CLoud-Aerosol-Radiation Interaction and Forcing: Year-2017, NERC funded), ORACLES (ObseRvations of Aerosols above CLouds and their intEractionS, NASA funded), LASIC (Layered Atlantic Smoke Interactions with Clouds, US DoE funded) and AEROCLO-sA (AErosol RadiatiOn and CLOuds in Southern Africa, French CNRS funded) are combining their considerable research efforts to jointly investigate these impacts.
Collaborator Contribution Prof Haywood was the co-convenor of the AGU session on clouds and aerosols over the SE Atlantic at the Fall meeting in San Francisco (Jens Redemann, convenor). Joint developments on forecast and satellite products have been shared through joint meetings (e.g. Haywood attended and presented at NASA Ames planning meeting in June 2016). Visits have also been made by Jens Redemann to the UK CLARIFY-2017 meetings (e.g. Oxford, March 2016). The collaboration continues with co-convened sessions at the AGU (2017, 2018) and the EGU (2019). AEROCLO-SA (French initiative) has also joined the collaborative venture. A significant (60 persons) joint meeting has been arranged for Paris in April 2019.
Impact A joint BAMS paper has been produced. Further joint papers are in preparation.
Start Year 2016
 
Description CLARIFY-ORACLES-LASIC partnership 
Organisation National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
Department NASA Ames Exploration Center
Country United States 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Biomass burning aerosols affect the climate in a combination of ways. The CLARIFY-2017 (CLoud-Aerosol-Radiation Interaction and Forcing: Year-2017, NERC funded), ORACLES (ObseRvations of Aerosols above CLouds and their intEractionS, NASA funded), LASIC (Layered Atlantic Smoke Interactions with Clouds, US DoE funded) and AEROCLO-sA (AErosol RadiatiOn and CLOuds in Southern Africa, French CNRS funded) are combining their considerable research efforts to jointly investigate these impacts.
Collaborator Contribution Prof Haywood was the co-convenor of the AGU session on clouds and aerosols over the SE Atlantic at the Fall meeting in San Francisco (Jens Redemann, convenor). Joint developments on forecast and satellite products have been shared through joint meetings (e.g. Haywood attended and presented at NASA Ames planning meeting in June 2016). Visits have also been made by Jens Redemann to the UK CLARIFY-2017 meetings (e.g. Oxford, March 2016). The collaboration continues with co-convened sessions at the AGU (2017, 2018) and the EGU (2019). AEROCLO-SA (French initiative) has also joined the collaborative venture. A significant (60 persons) joint meeting has been arranged for Paris in April 2019.
Impact A joint BAMS paper has been produced. Further joint papers are in preparation.
Start Year 2016
 
Description AGU, 2017: Convenor 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact AGU: New Orleans. Session Chair and session convenor.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
 
Description CLARIFY Outreach and Community Engagement - Ascension Island, August/September 2017 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact An important aspect of our campaign was communicating our research to others, in particular with those in the local community who are, perhaps, not involved in atmospheric science through community outreach. Indeed, CLARIFY is funded through UK tax payers money and there is an obligation to inform others of the impact of natural and anthropogenic activities on our regional weather and global climate, providing insight into how we can measure the state of our atmosphere and how this helps us to challenge current forecasts.

One of the most effective community engagement activities that occurred was 'experience flying'. FAAM organised for either one or two people from the Ascension Island community to join us on our research flights. In total, there were 25 experience flyers, including 11 people from the Ascension Island government, 1 person from the Royal Air Force, the local vicar, 2 people from the Delft University of Technology, 4 Ascension Met Office forecasters, 2 ARM science partners and 1 Penn State University science partner. In particular, Kitty George of the Ascension Island Government writes for the local newspaper and has described her experience in a recent article. Kitty described the opportunity as 'a brilliant day out and a great experience'.

Moreover, FAAM organised an open day for the islanders, involving a tour of the research aircraft on 2 September from 2 - 4 pm, although we overran by 1 hour due to popularity; close to 60 islanders came to visit. Upon arrival, Jim Haywood - the project PI - gave a presentation in the airport terminal describing the motivation and science behind CLARIFY. Then, members of FAAM escorted attendees across the airfield and gave a tour of the outside of the aircraft. Next, the pilots gave a tour of the cockpit, which was very popular with children in particular! Finally, instrument scientists gave an overview of their equipment and the types of measurements they were doing during flights. A separate open day was provided for the local Scout group, with approximately 25 scouts visiting on the afternoon of 8 September.

Finally, an outreach networking event took place on the penultimate evening of the campaign, involving a barbeque at the Obsidian Hotel. In addition to all those participating in CLARIFY, the BBQ was attended by members of the Ascension Island Government including the governor Mark Holland, the local conservation team, the RAF including Wing Commander Andy Pittock, the team at the Ascension Island ARM site that provides the majority of the ground based measurements for the CLARIFY campaign, the local Met Office team and a member of Penn State University. The evening proved a splendid end to the detachment and provided an opportunity to consolidate some of the relationships developed over the four weeks of detachment.

In summary, the CLARIFY campaign was a great success and a great deal of effort was made to work with and engage the Ascension Island community.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
 
Description CLARIFY-2017 data workshop, December 2017 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact 1st data workshop for CLARIFY-2017. The objective was to brief the full team on the successful flying programme of CLARIFY-2017 based from Ascension Island in Aug/Sept 2017.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
 
Description CLARIFY: Science meeting: October 2018 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact A large science meeting was held in Oct 2018: The purpose was to monitor research progress.

We have identified at least 21 papers that we are to submit to a joint ORACLE/CLARIFY-2017/AEROCLO-SA/LASIC special issue.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
 
Description EGU: 2019 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Haywood has acted as co-convenor for the ORACLES/CLARIFY/AEROCLO-SA/LASIC joint EGU session meeting in Vienna, April 2019.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description JOINT ORACLES/AEROCLO_SA/LASIC/CLARIFY meeting: Paris, April 2-4, 2019 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The purpose of the meeting is to inform the relevant parties of the synergies between their research efforts. This will enable a smoother publication strategy to be developed.

This was a very successful meeting and has allowed much interaction between researchers examining the climate influence of aerosols over the SE Atlantic.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description ORACLES/AEROCLO-SA/LASIC/CLARIFY meeting, Miami, May 2020 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact Added for completeness - final workshop where joint overall paper will be worked on.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020