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Satellite-Based Quantification of Contrail Radiative Forcing over Europe: A Two-Week Analysis of Aviation-Induced Climate Effects

Paper ID

SIDs-2024-102

Conference

SESAR Innovation Days

Year

2024

Theme

Contrails

Project Name

SESAR 3 ER1 project E-CONTRAIL

Keywords:

Contrail Radiative Forcing; Non-CO2 effects; Global Warming; Meteosat Second Generation; Satellite Data

Authors

Irene Ortiz, Javier García-Heras, Manuel Soler, Amin Jafarimoghaddam, Ermioni Dimitropoulou, Pierre de Buyl, Nicolas Clerbaux, Hugues Brenot, Jeroen van Gent, Klaus Sievers, Evelyn Otero and Parthiban Loganathan

DOI

https://doi.org/10.61009/SID.2024.1.53

Project Number

101114795

Abstract

Aviation’s non-CO2 effects, especially the impact of aviation-induced contrails, drive atmospheric changes and can influence climate dynamics. Although contrails are believed to contribute to global warming through their net warming effect, uncertainties persist due to the challenges in accurately measuring their radiative impacts. This study aims to address this knowledge gap by investigating the relationship between aviation- induced contrails, as observed in Meteosat Second Generation (MSG) satellite imagery, and their impact on radiative forcing (RF) over a two-week study. Results show that while daytime contrails generally have a cooling effect, the higher number of nighttime contrails results in a net warming effect over the entire day. Net RF values for detected contrails range approximately from -8 TW to 2.5 TW during the day and from 0 to 6 TW at night. Our findings also show a 41.03 % increase in contrail coverage from January 24–30, 2023, to the same week in 2024, accompanied by a 128.7 % rise in contrail radiative forcing (CRF), indicating greater warming from the added contrails. These findings highlight the necessity of considering temporal factors, such as the timing and duration of contrail formation, when assessing their overall warming impact. They also indicate a potential increase in contrail-induced warming from 2023 to 2024, attributable to the rise in contrail coverage. Further investigation into these trends is crucial for the development of effective mitigation strategies.