| Literature DB >> 33495345 |
Martin K Vollmer1, Jens Mühle2, Stephan Henne3, Dickon Young4, Matthew Rigby4, Blagoj Mitrevski5, Sunyoung Park6, Chris R Lunder7, Tae Siek Rhee8, Christina M Harth2, Matthias Hill3, Ray L Langenfelds5, Myriam Guillevic3, Paul M Schlauri3, Ove Hermansen7, Jgor Arduini9,10, Ray H J Wang11, Peter K Salameh2, Michela Maione9,10, Paul B Krummel5, Stefan Reimann3, Simon O'Doherty4, Peter G Simmonds4, Paul J Fraser5, Ronald G Prinn12, Ray F Weiss2, L Paul Steele5.
Abstract
Global and regional atmospheric measurements and modeling can play key roles in discovering and quantifying unexpected nascent emissions of environmentally important substances. We focus here on three hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) that are restricted by the Montreal Protocol because of their roles in stratospheric ozone depletion. Based on measurements of archived air samples and on in situ measurements at stations of the Advanced Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment (AGAGE) network, we report global abundances, trends, and regional enhancements for HCFC-132b ([Formula: see text]), which is newly discovered in the atmosphere, and updated results for HCFC-133a ([Formula: see text]) and HCFC-31 ([Formula: see text]ClF). No purposeful end-use is known for any of these compounds. We find that HCFC-132b appeared in the atmosphere 20 y ago and that its global emissions increased to 1.1 Gg⋅y-1 by 2019. Regional top-down emission estimates for East Asia, based on high-frequency measurements for 2016-2019, account for ∼95% of the global HCFC-132b emissions and for ∼80% of the global HCFC-133a emissions of 2.3 Gg⋅y-1 during this period. Global emissions of HCFC-31 for the same period are 0.71 Gg⋅y-1 Small European emissions of HCFC-132b and HCFC-133a, found in southeastern France, ceased in early 2017 when a fluorocarbon production facility in that area closed. Although unreported emissive end-uses cannot be ruled out, all three compounds are most likely emitted as intermediate by-products in chemical production pathways. Identification of harmful emissions to the atmosphere at an early stage can guide the effective development of global and regional environmental policy.Entities:
Keywords: Montreal Protocol; atmospheric composition; ozone depletion
Year: 2021 PMID: 33495345 PMCID: PMC7865182 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2010914118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205