Integrating anthropogenic heat flux with global climate models
Abstract
Nearly all energy used for human purposes is dissipated as heat within Earth's land-atmosphere system. Thermal energy released from non-renewable sources is therefore a climate forcing term. Averaged globally, this forcing is only +0.028 W m-2, but over the continental United States and western Europe, it is +0.39 and +0.68 W m-2, respectively. Here, present and future global inventories of anthropogenic heat flux (AHF) are developed, and parameterizations derived for seasonal and diurnal flux cycles. Equilibrium climate experiments show statistically-significant continental-scale surface warming (0.4-0.9°C) produced by one 2100 AHF scenario, but not by current or 2040 estimates. However, significant increases in annual-mean temperature and planetary boundary layer (PBL) height occur over gridcells where present-day AHF exceeds 3.0 W m-2. PBL expansion leads to a slight, but significant increase in atmospheric residence time of aerosols emitted from large-AHF regions. Hence, AHF may influence regional climate projections and contemporary chemistry-climate studies.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- January 2009
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2009GeoRL..36.2801F
- Keywords:
-
- Atmospheric Processes: Global climate models (1626;
- 4928);
- Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Pollution: urban and regional (0305;
- 0478;
- 4251);
- Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Aerosols and particles (0345;
- 4801;
- 4906);
- Atmospheric Processes: Boundary layer processes