Air Pollution Causing Decline in Monsoon Rains
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Source: http://www.airqualitynews.com/2014/10/08/air-pollution-causing-decline-in-monsoon-rains-study-finds/
University of Edinburgh-led
study suggests drying of monsoon over past 50 years caused by man-made
anthropogenic aerosol pollution
Air pollution particles from
man-made sources have played a “significant” role in a decline in monsoon
rainfall over the past 50 years, a University of Edinburgh-led study has found.
According to the study,
‘Decreased monsoon precipitation in the Northern Hemisphere due to
anthropogenic aerosols’, levels of rain recorded during the Northern
Hemisphere’s summer monsoon in the second half of the 20th century have fallen
by as much as 10%.
It
explains that changes to global rainfall patterns can have consequences for
human health and agriculture, as summer monsoons are “an integral component of
Earth’s hydrological cycle and affect the lives of billions of people” –
largely in the likes of India, South East Asia and parts of Africa.
The
team of scientists from the University of Edinburgh and the University of Reading
behind the study found that emissions of tiny air particles from man-made
sources – known as anthropogenic aerosols – were the cause of the decline in
monsoon rainfall.
According
to the study, high levels of aerosols in the atmosphere cause heat from the sun
to be reflected back into space, lowering temperatures on the earth’s surface
and reducing rainfall.
And,
it adds that levels of aerosol emissions have increased considerably since the
1950s, with the most common sources being power stations and cars.
Method
The
team calculated the average summer monsoon rainfall in the Northern Hemisphere
between 1951 and 2005, using computer-based climate models to quantify the
impact of increasing aerosol emissions and greenhouse gases over the same
period.
They
also took account of natural factors such as volcanic eruptions and climate
variability to gauge the impact of human activity on the amount of monsoon
rainfall.
However,
the researchers said levels of man-made aerosols are expected to decline during
the 21st century as countries begin adopting cleaner methods of power
generation.
Lead
author of the study, Dr Debbie Polson – University of Edinburgh’s School of
GeoSciences – said: “This study shows for the first time that the drying of the
monsoon over the past 50 years cannot be explained by natural climate
variability and that human activity has played a significant role in altering
the seasonal monsoon rainfall on which billions of people depend.”
The
study was published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters in August 2014
and was funded by the Natural Environmental Research Council, European Research
Council and National Centre for Atmospheric Science.
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