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New study shows 'self-cleaning' of marine atmosphere by Staff Writers York UK (SPX) Jan 19, 2023
Scientists have shed new light on the 'self-cleaning' capacity of the atmosphere. This process of self-cleaning is essential to remove gaseous pollutants and regulate greenhouse gases such as methane from the atmosphere. Researchers were already aware that the atmosphere had this 'self-cleaning' ability, but in a new study from the University York, experts have now shown a new process that increases the ability of the marine atmosphere to self-cleanse. Using a combination of aircraft and ground-based observations, scientists were able to confirm the widespread presence of nitrous oxide (HONO) in the remote Atlantic troposphere formed by so-called "renoxification", whereby photolysis of aerosol nitrate returns nitrogen oxides (NOx) and HONO to the marine atmosphere. Historically, aerosol nitrate had been considered a permanent sink for NOx. This new process could increase the ability of the atmosphere to self-cleanse on a global scale. Scientists say the findings, published in Sciences Advances, could be highly significant for atmospheric chemistry and largely reconcile widespread uncertainty on the importance of renoxification. With funding from the Natural Environmental Research Council (NERC), scientists from the Wolfson Atmospheric Chemistry Laboratories (WACL) led extensive aircraft and ground-based observations in and around Cape Verde in August 2019 and February 2020. Lead author, Professor Lucy Carpenter said: "Importantly, the observations showed that the efficiency of renoxification increased with relative humidity and decreased with the concentration of nitrate. "This observation reconciled the very large discrepancies in the rates of renoxification found across multiple laboratory and field studies. "It was also consistent with renoxification occurring on the surface of aerosols, rather than within their bulk, a new and exciting finding with implications for how this fundamental process is controlled and parameterised in models." Recycling of nitrogen oxides on nitrate aerosol could have important, increasing, and as yet unexplored implications for the trends and distributions of atmospheric oxidants such as tropospheric ozone, an important greenhouse gas.
Dairy giant Danone vows to slash planet-warming methane Paris (AFP) Jan 17, 2023 French food giant Danone said Tuesday it would slash planet-warming methane emissions by 30 percent by 2030, vowing to change the way the cows it uses are raised and milked. Methane is responsible for roughly 30 percent of the global rise in temperatures to date. It is released from the oil and gas, waste and agriculture sectors as well as through natural processes. Cattle farming is a major driver, since cows expel methane by burping. Their manure also releases the harmful gas. Agriculture and ... read more
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