Mitigation of Non-CO2 Aviation’s Climate Impact by Changing Cruise Altitudes

Matthes, Sigrun and Lim, Ling and Burkhardt, Ulrike and Dahlmann, Katrin and Dietmüller, Simone and Grewe, Volker and Haslerud, Amund S. and Hendricks, Johannes and Owen, Bethan and Pitari, Giovanni and Righi, Mattia and Skowron, Agnieszka (2021) Mitigation of Non-CO2 Aviation’s Climate Impact by Changing Cruise Altitudes. Aerospace, 8 (2). p. 36. ISSN 2226-4310

[thumbnail of aerospace-08-00036.pdf] Text
aerospace-08-00036.pdf - Published Version

Download (5MB)

Abstract

Aviation is seeking for ways to reduce its climate impact caused by CO2 emissions and non-CO2 effects. Operational measures which change overall flight altitude have the potential to reduce climate impact of individual effects, comprising CO2 but in particular non-CO2 effects. We study the impact of changes of flight altitude, specifically aircraft flying 2000 feet higher and lower, with a set of global models comprising chemistry-transport, chemistry-climate and general circulation models integrating distinct aviation emission inventories representing such alternative flight altitudes, estimating changes in climate impact of aviation by quantifying radiative forcing and induced temperature change. We find in our sensitivity study that flying lower leads to a reduction of radiative forcing of non-CO2 effects together with slightly increased CO2 emissions and impacts, when cruise speed is not modified. Flying higher increases radiative forcing of non-CO2 effects by about 10%, together with a slight decrease of CO2 emissions and impacts. Overall, flying lower decreases aviation-induced temperature change by about 20%, as a decrease of non-CO2 impacts by about 30% dominates over slightly increasing CO2 impacts assuming a sustained emissions scenario. Those estimates are connected with a large but unquantified uncertainty. To improve the understanding of mechanisms controlling the aviation climate impact, we study the geographical distributions of aviation-induced modifications in the atmosphere, together with changes in global radiative forcing and suggest further efforts in order to reduce long standing uncertainties.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Opene Prints > Engineering
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 08 Dec 2022 11:50
Last Modified: 20 Sep 2023 07:13
URI: http://geographical.go2journals.com/id/eprint/306

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item