Asian brown cloud
The Indian Ocean brown cloud or Asian brown cloud is a layer
of air pollution that recurrently covers parts of South Asia, namely
the northern Indian Ocean, India, and Pakistan.[1][2] Viewed from
satellite photos, the cloud appears as a giant brown stain hanging in
the air over much of South Asia and the Indian Ocean every year
between January and March, possibly also during earlier and later
months. The term was coined in reports from the UNEP Indian
Ocean Experiment (INDOEX).[3]
The term atmospheric brown cloud is used for a more generic
context not specific to the Asian region.[4]
Contents
Causes Atmospheric Brown Cloud over China
Observations
Impacts
Health problems
Regional weather
Cyclone intensity in Arabian Sea
Global warming and dimming
See also
References
Further reading
Big Brown Cloud Storm over Asia
External links
Causes
The Asian brown cloud is created by a range of airborne particles and pollutants from combustion (e.g.,
woodfires, cars, and factories), biomass burning[5] and industrial processes with incomplete burning.[6] The
cloud is associated with the winter monsoon (November/December to April) during which there is no rain
to wash pollutants from the air.[7]
Observations
This pollution layer was observed during the Indian Ocean Experiment (INDOEX) intensive field
observation in 1999 and described in the UNEP impact assessment study published 2002.[3] Scientists in
India claimed that the Asian Brown cloud is not something specific to Asia.[8] Subsequently, when the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) organized a follow-up international project, the subject
of study was renamed the Atmospheric Brown Cloud with focus on Asia.
The cloud was also reported by NASA in 2004[9] and 2007.[10]
Although aerosol particles are generally associated with a global cooling effect, recent studies have shown
that they can actually have a warming effect in certain regions such as the Himalayas.[11]
Impacts
Health problems
One major impact is on health. A 2002 study indicated nearly two million people die each year, in Asia
alone, from conditions related to the brown cloud.[12]
Regional weather
A second assessment study was published in 2008.[13] It highlighted regional concerns regarding:
Changes of rainfall patterns with the Asian monsoon, as well as a delaying of the start of the
Asian monsoon, by several weeks.[14][15] The observed weakening Indian monsoon and in
China northern drought and southern flooding is influenced by the clouds.
Increase in rainfall over the Australian Top End and Kimberley regions. A CSIRO study has
found that by displacing the thermal equator southwards via cooling of the air over East
Asia, the monsoon which brings most of the rain to these regions has been intensified and
displaced southward.[16]
Retreat of the Hindu Kush-Himalayan glaciers and snow packs. The cause is attributed to
rising air temperatures that are more pronounced in elevated regions, a combined warming
effect of greenhouse gases and the Asian Brown Cloud. Also deposition of black carbon
decreases the reflection and exacerbates the retreat. Asian glacial melting could lead to
water shortages and floods for the hundreds of millions of people who live downstream.
Decrease of crop harvests. Elevated concentrations of surface ozone are likely to affect crop
yields negatively. The impact is crop specific.
Cyclone intensity in Arabian Sea
A 2011 study found that pollution is making Arabian Sea cyclones more intense as the atmospheric brown
clouds has been producing weakening wind patterns which prevent wind shear patterns that historically
have prohibited cyclones in the Arabian Sea from becoming major storms. This phenomenon was found
responsible for the formation of stronger storms in 2007 and 2010 that were the first recorded storms to
enter the Gulf of Oman.[17][18]
Global warming and dimming
The 2008 report also addressed the global concern of warming and concluded that the brown clouds have
masked 20 to 80 percent of greenhouse gas forcing in the past century. The report suggested that air
pollution regulations can have large amplifying effects on global warming.
Another major impact is on the polar ice caps. Black carbon (soot) in the Asian Brown Cloud may be
reflecting sunlight and dimming Earth below but it is warming other places by absorbing incoming
radiation and warming the atmosphere and whatever it touches.[19] Black carbon is three times more
effective than carbon dioxide—the most common greenhouse gas—at melting polar ice and snow.[20]
Black carbon in snow causes about three times the temperature change as carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere. On snow—even at concentrations below five parts per billion–dark carbon triggers melting,
and may be responsible for as much as 94 percent of Arctic warming.[21]
See also
Asian Dust
Arctic haze
Air pollution in India
Chemical Equator
1997, 2006, 2009, 2013 Southeast Asian haze
References
1. Srinivasan (10 September 2002). "Asian Brown Cloud – fact and fantasy" ([Link]
[Link]/web/20041105023244/[Link] (PDF). Current
Science. 83 (5): 586–592. Archived from the original ([Link]
[Link]) (PDF) on 5 November 2004.
2. Ramanathan, Veerabhadran; Crutzen, P. J.; Lelieveld, J.; Mitra, A. P.; Althausen, D.;
Anderson, J.; Andreae, M. O.; Cantrell, W.; et al. (2001). "Indian Ocean experiment: An
integrated analysis of the climate forcing and effects of the great Indo-Asian haze" ([Link]
[Link]/10.1029%2F2001JD900133). Journal of Geophysical Research. 106 (D22): 28371–
28398. Bibcode:2001JGR...10628371R ([Link]
8371R). doi:10.1029/2001JD900133 ([Link]
3. Ramanathan, Veerabhadran et al. (2002) The Asian brown cloud climate and other
environmental impacts: impact study ([Link]
[Link]) Archived ([Link]
ues/air/impactstudy/[Link]) June 5, 2004, at the Wayback Machine Center for Clouds,
Chemistry and Climate, United Nations Environment Programme, Nairobi Kenya, ISBN 92-
807-2240-9, accessed 8 December 2008
4. Haag, Amanda Leigh (2007). "The even darker side of brown clouds" ([Link]
m/climate/2007/0709/full/[Link]). Nature Reports Climate Change. 1 (709):
52–53. doi:10.1038/climate.2007.41 ([Link] Retrieved
16 September 2014.
5. Gustafsson, Örjan; Kruså, Martin; Zencak, Zdenek; Sheesley, R. J.; Granat, Lennart;
Engström, Erik; Praveen, P. S.; Rao, P. S. P.; Leck, Caroline; Rodhe, Henning; et al. (2009).
"Brown Clouds over South Asia: Biomass or Fossil Fuel Combustion?". Science. 323
(5913): 495–498. Bibcode:2009Sci...323..495G ([Link]
323..495G). doi:10.1126/science.1164857 ([Link]
PMID 19164746 ([Link] S2CID 44712883 ([Link]
[Link]/CorpusID:44712883).
6. Taylor, David (1 January 2003). "The ABCs of Haze" ([Link]
001357/[Link] Environmental Health
Perspectives. 111 (1): A21–A22. doi:10.1289/ehp.111-a21a ([Link]
111-a21a). PMC 1241333 ([Link]
Archived from the original ([Link] on
2006-08-28.
7. Petit, C. W. (2003) "A darkening sky: A smoky shroud over Asia blocks both sun and rain"
U.S. News & World Report (17 March 2003), 134(8): pp. 46-8
8. Pandve, Harshal T. (2008). "The Asian Brown Cloud" ([Link]
4215327/[Link]
spage=93;epage=95;aulast=Pandve). Indian Journal of Occupational and Environmental
Medicine. 12 (2): 93–5. doi:10.4103/0019-5278.43269 ([Link]
8.43269). PMC 2796752 ([Link]
PMID 20040987 ([Link] Archived from the original (htt
p://[Link]/[Link]?issn=0019-5278;year=2008;volume=12;issue=2;spage=93;e
page=95;aulast=Pandve) on 24 February 2009. Retrieved 8 December 2008.
9. NASA Eyes Effects of a Giant 'Brown Cloud' Worldwide (2004) ([Link]
earth/environment/brown_cloud.html)
10. Global Aerosol System 2000-2007 (NASA Earth Observatory) ([Link]
gov/IOTD/[Link]?id=8857)
11. Ramanathan, Veerabhadran; Ramana, MV; Roberts, G; Kim, D; Corrigan, C; Chung, C;
Winker, D (2 August 2007). "Warming trends in Asia amplified by brown cloud solar
absorption". Nature. 448 (7153): 575–578. Bibcode:2007Natur.448..575R ([Link]
[Link]/abs/2007Natur.448..575R). doi:10.1038/nature06019 ([Link]
Fnature06019). PMID 17671499 ([Link]
S2CID 4420513 ([Link]
12. Ahmad, K. (2002). "Pollution cloud over south Asia is increasing ill health". Lancet. 360
(9332): 549. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(02)09762-3 ([Link]
6%2802%2909762-3). PMID 12241664 ([Link]
S2CID 35909421 ([Link]
13. "Archived copy" ([Link]
[Link]) (PDF). Archived from the original on 2008-11-18. Retrieved
2008-11-18.
14. Brown cloud delaying monsoon ([Link]
15. Paper reporting the delaying of the monsoon being caused by brown cloud ([Link]
n/uploadpdf/tac2012_Rashed_Li_BC.pdf)
16. Rotstayn, Leon; Cai, Wenju; Dix, Martin R.; Farquhar, Graham D.; Feng, Yan; Ginoux, Paul;
Herzog, Michael; Ito, Akinori; et al. (2 May 2007). "Have Australian rainfall and cloudiness
increased due to the remote effects of Asian anthropogenic aerosols?" ([Link]
rg/web/20070930184533/[Link]
Journal of Geophysical Research. 112 (D09202): D09202. Bibcode:2007JGRD..11209202R
([Link] doi:10.1029/2006JD007712 (ht
tps://[Link]/10.1029%2F2006JD007712). hdl:2027.42/94749 ([Link]
2%2F94749). Archived from the original ([Link]
[Link]) on 2007-09-30.
17. "Link Between Air Pollution and Cyclone Intensity in Arabian Sea" ([Link]
s/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=122072&WT.mc_id=USNSF_51&WT.mc_ev=click). National
Science Foundation. 2011-11-02. Retrieved 2011-11-07.
18. Evan, Amato T.; Kossin, James P.; Chung, Chul; Ramanathan, V. (2011-11-03). "Arabian
Sea tropical cyclones intensified by emissions of black carbon and other aerosols". Nature.
479 (7371): 94–97. Bibcode:2011Natur.479...94E ([Link]
tur.479...94E). doi:10.1038/nature10552 ([Link]
PMID 22051678 ([Link] S2CID 4423931 ([Link]
[Link]/CorpusID:4423931).
19. Biello, David (August 1, 2007). "Brown Haze from Cooking Fires Cooking [Link]
brown haze over Asia warms the atmosphere just as much as greenhouse gases" ([Link]
[Link]/[Link]?id=brown-haze-from-cooking-fires-cooking-earth).
Scientific American.
20. Biello, David (June 8, 2007). "Impure as the Driven Snow: Smut is a bigger problem than
greenhouse gases in polar meltdown" ([Link]
ure-as-the-driven-snow). Scientific American.
21. Boswell, Randy (October 19, 2009). "Burning crops darken Arctic sky, speed polar melt" (htt
ps://[Link]/web/20100206215104/[Link]
crops%2Bdarken%2BArctic%2Bspeed%2Bpolar%2Bmelt/1635692/[Link]). Canwest
News Service. Archived from the original ([Link]
+darken+Arctic+speed+polar+melt/1635692/[Link]) on February 6, 2010.
Further reading
Ramanathan, V.; Crutzen, P. J. (2003). "New Directions: Atmospheric Brown "Clouds" ".
Atmospheric Environment. 37 (28): 4033–4035. Bibcode:2003AtmEn..37.4033R ([Link]
[Link]/abs/2003AtmEn..37.4033R). doi:10.1016/S1352-2310(03)00536-3 (http
s://[Link]/10.1016%2FS1352-2310%2803%2900536-3).
Silva-Send, Nilmini (2007) Preventing regional air pollution in Asia : the potential role of the
European Convention on Long Range Transboundary Air Pollution in Asian regions
University of Kiel, Kiel, Germany, OCLC 262737812 ([Link]
12)
External links
Bray, Marianne (2002) "'Asian Brown Cloud' poses global threat" CNN ([Link]
rg/web/20071009231830/[Link]
ze/), from WebArchive
Retrieved from "[Link]
This page was last edited on 17 March 2022, at 23:35 (UTC).
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 3.0;
additional terms may apply. By
using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the
Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.