Emissions, Fate and Transport
of Persistent Organic
Pollutants to the Arctic in a Changing Global Climate
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Abstract
Climate change is expected to alter patterns of human
economic
activity and the associated emissions of chemicals, and also to affect
the transport and fate of persistent organic pollutants (POPs). Here,
we use a global-scale multimedia chemical fate model to analyze and
quantify the impact of climate change on emissions and fate of POPs,
and their transport to the Arctic. First, climate change effects under
the SRES-A2 scenario are illustrated using case-studies for two well-characterized
POPs, PCB153, and α-HCH. Then, we model the combined impact
of altered emission patterns and climatic conditions on environmental
concentrations of potential future-use substances with a broad range
of chemical properties. Starting from base-case generic emission scenarios,
we postulate changes in emission patterns that may occur in response
to climate change: enhanced usage of industrial chemicals in an ice-free
Arctic, and intensified application of agrochemicals due to higher
crop production and poleward expansion of potential arable land. We
find both increases and decreases in concentrations of POP-like chemicals
in the Arctic in the climate change scenario compared to the base-case
climate. During the phase of ongoing primary emissions, modeled increases
in Arctic contamination are up to a factor of 2 in air and water,
and are driven mostly by changes in emission patterns. After phase-out,
increases are up to a factor of 2 in air and 4 in water, and are mostly
attributable to changes in transport and fate of chemicals under the
climate change scenario