Brown Clouds over South Asia: Biomass or Fossil Fuel Combustion?
Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology · Stockholm University · +1 more institution
Abstract
Carbonaceous aerosols cause strong atmospheric heating and large surface cooling that is as important to South Asian climate forcing as greenhouse gases, yet the aerosol sources are poorly understood. Emission inventory models suggest that biofuel burning accounts for 50 to 90% of emissions, whereas the elemental composition of ambient aerosols points to fossil fuel combustion. We used radiocarbon measurements of winter monsoon aerosols from western India and the Indian Ocean to determine that biomass combustion produced two-thirds of the bulk carbonaceous aerosols, as well as one-half and two-thirds of two black carbon subfractions, respectively. These constraints show that both biomass combustion (such as…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.68
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 33
Authors
10- ÖGÖrjan GustafssonCorresponding
Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Stockholm University, Maldives National University
- MKMartin Kruså
Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Stockholm University, Maldives National University
- ZZZdenek Zencak
Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Stockholm University, Maldives National University
- RJRebecca J. Sheesley
Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Stockholm University, Maldives National University
- LGLennart Granat
Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Stockholm University, Maldives National University
Topics & keywords
- Combustion
- Environmental science
- Fossil fuel
- Biomass (ecology)
- Aerosol
- Biofuel
- Greenhouse gas
- Biomass burning