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Elevated particle emissions resulting from increased economic activity in Asia may have increased Australia's tropical rainfall, according to new research on the way pollution influences our climate.
"Until now, there has been ample evidence that
these particles have important effects on climate in the Northern
Hemisphere but little such evidence in the Southern Hemisphere," says
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO)
Marine and Atmospheric Research scientist, Dr Leon Rotstayn.
"What we have seen in our latest climate simulations is that the 'Asian
haze' is having an effect on the Australian hydrological cycle and
generated increasing rainfall and cloudiness since 1950, especially
over northwest and central Australia. The effect occurs because the
haze cools the Asian continent and nearby oceans, and thereby alters
the delicate balance of temperature and winds between Asia and
Australia. It has nothing to do with Asian pollution being transported
directly over Australia."
Dr Rotstayn says this implies that decreasing pollution in Asia later
this century could reverse this effect and lead to an increase in
Australian drying trends.
"We are really at the beginning of understanding the trends but sooner
or later these emissions will be cleaned up and then a trend of
increasing rainfall in the northwest and centre could be reversed. This
is potentially serious, because the northwest and centre are the only
parts of Australia where rainfall has been increasing in recent
decades."
Dr Rotstayn stresses that climate modelling is a valuable tool for
teasing out what is actually causing weather trends, rather than simply
assuming that these trends are all related to greenhouse gases.
At a time when Australian science agencies are investing in new climate
forecasting capabilities, the research - to be published early in 2007
in the Journal of Geophysical Research - increases confidence in the
accuracy of future climate simulations for Australia.
An aerosol is a haze of particles in the atmosphere. Dr Rotstayn says
representing aerosols in climate models and understanding their
influence on cloud formation and rainfall is one of the biggest
challenges facing climate scientists.
"Because the cooling effect of aerosol pollution is possibly comparable
to the warming effect of increased levels of carbon dioxide, the
message from this research is that aerosols are an essential inclusion
if we are to accurately describe present and future Australian
climate," he says.
The new research is based on simulations performed with a new
low-resolution version of CSIRO's global climate model - including a
treatment of aerosols from both natural and human-induced sources.
Dr Rotstayn was lead author of the paper with contributing scientists
from: the Cooperative Research Centre for Greenhouse Accounting; the
University of Michigan's Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space
Sciences; and, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory in Princeton.
David Bass
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