Earth Science Frontiers ›› 2025, Vol. 32 ›› Issue (3): 263-273.DOI: 10.13745/j.esf.sf.2025.3.20

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A study on the impact of clean fuel application on the radiative effects of shipping sulfate aerosols

SUN Yiyang(), ZHANG Bei, ZHAO Xi*(), ZHU Jialei   

  1. Institute of Surface-Earth Science, School of Earth System Science, Tianjin University, Tianjin 300072, China
  • Received:2025-02-04 Revised:2025-02-22 Online:2025-03-25 Published:2025-04-20

Abstract:

Ship-emitted SO2 form sulfate aerosols (PSO4) in the marine atmosphere, which have significant impacts on climate, primarily through direct radiative effects (DRE) and indirect radiative effects (IRE), leading to a net cooling effect on the Earth system. This study, using an Earth system model and a global ship emissions inventory, investigates the changes in shipping PSO4 and its radiative effects under the current global 0.5% sulfur content regulation (0.5% S), as well as a scenario in which the 0.1% sulfur content regulation in certain controlled zones is extended globally (0.1% S). The results show that under the 0.5% S control, the global average burden of shipping PSO4 is 58.2±6.5 μg·m-2, producing a DRE of -10.4±1.6 mW·m-2. The indirect effect is the dominant part of the radiative effect, with the IRE of shipping PSO4 under the 0.5% S control being approximately -64.7±40.5 mW·m-2. The average burden of shipping PSO4 on shipping routes is about 200 μg·m-2, and the radiative effect is about 600 mW·m-2. Compared to the current 0.5% S regulation, in the 0.1% S scenario, the concentration of shipping PSO4 decreases by about 80%. Regarding radiative effects, the DRE decreases to -2.1±0.4 mW·m-2, and the IRE decreases to -15.2±11.2 mW·m-2, resulting in a 77% reduction in total radiative effects. The spatial and temporal distribution of shipping PSO4 radiative effects is highly uneven. Globally, the highest values are concentrated in the Northern Hemisphere, especially along the shipping routes in the North Atlantic, North Pacific, and the coastal areas of the North Indian Ocean, where total radiative effects can reach up to approximately -350 mW·m-2. The strongest radiative effects in both hemispheres occur during their respective summer seasons. On a global average, the total radiative effect of shipping PSO4 is strongest in summer (-34.9 mW·m-2), with some areas approaching -1200 mW·m-2; it is weakest in winter, being less than a quarter of the summer value. The global use of cleaner ship fuels will significantly reduce the cooling radiative effects of shipping PSO4, while also reducing air pollution

Key words: ship emissions, sulfates aerosol, radiative effect, low-sulfur fuel, earth system mode

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