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Erik Swietlicki. Photo.

Erik Swietlicki

Professor

Erik Swietlicki. Photo.

Impact on short-lived climate forcers increases projected warming due to deforestation

Author

  • C. E. Scott
  • S. A. Monks
  • D. V. Spracklen
  • S. R. Arnold
  • P. M. Forster
  • A. Rap
  • M. Äijälä
  • P. Artaxo
  • K. S. Carslaw
  • M. P. Chipperfield
  • M. Ehn
  • S. Gilardoni
  • L. Heikkinen
  • M. Kulmala
  • T. Petäjä
  • C. L.S. Reddington
  • L. V. Rizzo
  • E. Swietlicki
  • E. Vignati
  • C. Wilson

Summary, in English

The climate impact of deforestation depends on the relative strength of several biogeochemical and biogeophysical effects. In addition to affecting the exchange of carbon dioxide (CO2) and moisture with the atmosphere and surface albedo, vegetation emits biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs) that alter the formation of short-lived climate forcers (SLCFs), which include aerosol, ozone and methane. Here we show that a scenario of complete global deforestation results in a net positive radiative forcing (RF; 0.12 W m-2) from SLCFs, with the negative RF from decreases in ozone and methane concentrations partially offsetting the positive aerosol RF. Combining RFs due to CO2, surface albedo and SLCFs suggests that global deforestation could cause 0.8 K warming after 100 years, with SLCFs contributing 8% of the effect. However, deforestation as projected by the RCP8.5 scenario leads to zero net RF from SLCF, primarily due to nonlinearities in the aerosol indirect effect.

Department/s

  • Centre for Environmental and Climate Science (CEC)
  • Nuclear physics
  • MERGE: ModElling the Regional and Global Earth system

Publishing year

2018-12-01

Language

English

Publication/Series

Nature Communications

Volume

9

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Topic

  • Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use
  • Climate Research

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2041-1723