HTAP3 Fires: towards a multi-model, multi-pollutant study of fire impacts

Publication date

2025-06-03

Authors

Whaley, Cynthia H.
Butler, Tim
Adame, Jose A.
Ambulkar, Rupal
Arnold, Steve R.
Buchholz, Rebecca R.
Gaubert, Benjamin
Hamilton, Douglas S.
Huang, Min
Hung, Hayley

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Open biomass burning has major impacts globally and regionally on atmospheric composition. Fire emissions include particulate matter, tropospheric ozone precursors, and greenhouse gases, as well as persistent organic pollutants, mercury, and other metals. Fire frequency, intensity, duration, and location are changing as the climate warms, and modelling these fires and their impacts is becoming more and more critical to inform climate adaptation and mitigation, as well as land management. Indeed, the air pollution from fires can reverse the progress made by emission controls on industry and transportation. At the same time, nearly all aspects of fire modelling - such as emissions, plume injection height, long-range transport, and plume chemistry - are highly uncertain. This paper outlines a multi-model, multi-pollutant, multi-regional study to improve the understanding of the uncertainties and variability in fire atmospheric science, models, and fires' impacts, in addition to providing quantitative estimates of the air pollution and radiative impacts of biomass burning. Coordinated under the auspices of the Task Force on Hemispheric Transport of Air Pollution, the international atmospheric modelling and fire science communities are working towards the common goal of improving global fire modelling and using this multi-model experiment to provide estimates of fire pollution for impact studies. This paper outlines the research needs, opportunities, and options for the fire-focused multi-model experiments and provides guidance for these modelling experiments, outputs, and analyses that are to be pursued over the next 3 to 5 years. The paper proposes a plan for delivering specific products at key points over this period to meet important milestones relevant to science and policy audiences.

Keywords

Air-quality, Biomass-burning aerosol, Health impacts, Particulate matter, Reactive nitrogen, Sediment transport, Southeast atlantic, Surface ozone, Tropospheric ozone, Wild-land fires, SDG 13 - Climate Action

Citation

Whaley, C H, Butler, T, Adame, J A, Ambulkar, R, Arnold, S R, Buchholz, R R, Gaubert, B, Hamilton, D S, Huang, M, Hung, H, Kaiser, J W, Kaminski, J W, Knote, C, Koren, G, Kouassi, J-L, Lin, M, Liu, T, Ma, J, Manomaiphiboon, K, Bergas Masso, E, McCarty, J L, Mertens, M, Parrington, M, Peiro, H, Saxena, P, Sonwani, S, Surapipith, V, Tan, D Y T, Tang, W, Tanpipat, V, Tsigaridis, K, Wiedinmyer, C, Wild, O, Xie, Y & Zuidema, P 2025, 'HTAP3 Fires : towards a multi-model, multi-pollutant study of fire impacts', Geoscientific Model Development, vol. 18, no. 11, pp. 3265-3309. https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-18-3265-2025