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Article

Multi-Decadal Trends in Aerosol Optical Depth of the Main Aerosol Species Based on MERRA-2 Reanalysis: A Case Study in the Baltic Sea Basin

1
Department of Pure and Applied Sciences, University of Urbino, 61029 Urbino, Italy
2
Department of Industrial Engineering and Mathematical Sciences, Marche Polytechnic University, 60131 Ancona, Italy
3
Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate, National Research Council, 73100 Lecce, Italy
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(13), 2421; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16132421
Submission received: 10 May 2024 / Revised: 24 June 2024 / Accepted: 26 June 2024 / Published: 1 July 2024
(This article belongs to the Section Urban Remote Sensing)

Abstract

:
This study analyses the trends of total aerosol and the main aerosol species over nine capitals in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019 based on the Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications, Version 2 Reanalysis. Aerosol speciation includes mineral dust, sea salt, sulphate (SO4), organic carbon (OC), and black carbon (BC). The mean total aerosol optical depth (AOD) values were the highest (up to 0.216) over the continental capitals (i.e., Warsaw, Berlin, and Vilnius). For each capital, the mean SO4 AOD was the main aerosol species, with a trend specular to total AOD. Apart from Warsaw, the mean BC AOD was the aerosol species with the lowest level. The composition of aerosols changed with respect to the species of anthropogenic origins (i.e., SO4, OC, and BC), with the percentage contribution to the total AOD decreasing for the SO4 AOD and increasing for the BC AOD. Also, the OC AOD showed an increase in the percentage contribution to total AOD for Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm, and the continental capitals. Anthropogenic aerosols contributed up to 90.3% of the total AOD, with the highest values over the continental capitals. For each capital, the minimum in the percentage contribution of anthropogenic AOD was between 2007 and 2008, likely due to the global financial crisis. Anthropogenic AOD as a percentage of the total AOD decreased from 1989 to 2008. Both the total and the SO4 AODs decreased over each capital. By contrast, the BC AOD increased over Stockholm, and both the OC and BC AODs increased over Berlin, Copenhagen, and Oslo. The decoupling of carbonaceous aerosols and the SO4 AOD trends was likely due to concurrent factors such as biomass burning and low-sulphur fuel policies. From 2000 to 2019, the inverse relationships between gross domestic products and SO4 AODs suggest a relative decoupling of economic growth from fossil fuels for Oslo, Stockholm, Tallinn, and Vilnius.

Graphical Abstract

1. Introduction

Aerosol optical depth (AOD) is a unitless measure of the interaction of solid or liquid airborne particles with sunlight in the air column. In this context, it may be considered a proxy for the level of atmospheric pollution.
Previous air-quality studies observed negative AOD trends over the most populated European cities, the European continent, or certain areas within Europe based on AOD reanalysis [1,2] satellite measurements [3,4,5,6,7] or datasets from multiplatform observations and reanalysis [8,9] in the time span of the last two decades. Mehta et al. [3] reported negative AOD trends for total AOD, and polluted dust and smoke AODs associated with negative aerosol extinction trends up to 2 km above sea mean level based on ten-year-long CALIOP (Cloud Aerosol Lidar with Orthogonal Polarization; [10] observations. Gupta et al. [11] ascribed the decreasing total AOD trend to decreasing SO4 and dust AODs based on the MERRA-2 (Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications, Version 2; [12]), and to a decrease in dust, polluted dust, and elevated smoke in the free troposphere based on CALIOP over Europe. Based on the MERRA [13] reanalysis, Provençal et al. [1] analysed AOD aerosol species and trends over the most populated cities in the world over a 13-year period from 2003 to 2015. These authors observed a general decrease in both total and SO4 AODs for a selection of capitals in Europe.
Several authors [3,4,8,9] suggested that decreasing trends in annual mean AOD levels were attributable to the enforcement of environmental regulations aimed at decreasing emissions of NOX and SOX, or a shift to a greener energy mix [14] in Europe. According to Naqvi [15], the EU regions with the highest income per capita showed a lower responsiveness to environmental regulations, varying with the emission types, likely due to a shift towards the service sector.
Previous studies [1,16] reported relationships between variations in economic, industrial, and energy indicators, the levels of anthropogenic aerosol load, and the relative contribution to total aerosol.
Papachristopoulou et al. [17] investigated the AOD variability of 81 world megacities’ urban agglomerations and their respective surrounding areas based on spatial gradient analysis. According to these authors, about 65% of megacities showed higher 18-year mean AOD values over the city’s centre compared to the surrounding areas. Di Antonio et al. [7] analysed the variation in local and regional AOD levels based on the MAIAC (Multi-Angle Implementation of Atmospheric Correction; [18]) algorithm applied to MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer; [19,20]) observations from 2000 to 2021 over several cities in Europe. According to these authors, local AOD levels in European cities such as Paris, Athens, and Barcelona were higher compared to the regional AOD levels because of the contributions of local anthropogenic emissions and favourable atmospheric conditions.
No studies have investigated the AOD aerosol species over the Baltic Sea area for a time span longer than 20 years. To fill this gap in AOD studies, we investigated the trends of total aerosol and aerosol species over the capitals of 9 countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, and Sweden from 1989 to 2019 based on MERRA-2 reanalysis. In this time span, drastic changes occurred in the Baltic area in the socioeconomic, political, and historical spheres. In this context, following the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Baltic states, Germany, and Poland made significant reforms in their economic and political systems.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Study Region: Economic, Population and Energy Statistics

Figure 1 shows the location of the study area, the countries, and the capitals in the Baltic Sea basin. Based on the location, the capitals can be grouped as continental (Berlin, Warsaw, and Vilnius) and coastal cities (Copenhagen, Helsinki, Oslo, Riga, Stockholm, and Tallinn) (Figure 1b).
Annual data at the national level (NUTS1, the nomenclature of territorial units for statistics level 1 [21]) and the local level (NUTS3) were retrieved from the EUROSTAT database (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/data/database, accessed on 22 January 2023). Preference was given to the data with the finest geographical resolution (i.e., NUTS3). Data about energy efficiency and the share of fossil fuel in the gross available energy (SFFGAE) were only available at NUTS1 level.
At the NUTS3 level, Berlin was the most populated, followed by Helsinki, Warsaw, and Stockholm with populations in the range 1.2–2.3 million people. The other statistical entities had populations in the range 530–850 thousand people (Figure 2a). In the last decades, an increase in population occurred in Berlin, Helsinki, Copenhagen, and Oslo, whereas Riga and Vilnius showed a decreasing trend in population.
At the NUTS3 level, the mean gross domestic product (GDP) per capita was the highest for Oslo (about EUR 95 thousand per capita), followed by Copenhagen, Stockholm, and Helsinki with values in the range EUR 47–61 thousand per capita, Berlin and Warsaw (EUR 32 and 26 thousand per capita, respectively), and Riga, Vilnius, and Tallinn (EUR 14–17 thousand per capita) (Figure 2b). With the economic crisis of 2008–2009, all the statistical entities except for Berlin showed lower GDPs. Despite the economic crisis, the GDPs had a similar increasing trend from 2000 to 2019 for all the statistical entities except for Oslo, which had a steady increase between 2009 and 2012, but a shorter time series.
At the national level, primary energy consumption was the highest in Germany, which had about three times the primary energy consumption in Poland, which in turn was more than twice the primary energy consumption of the other countries between 1990 and 2019 (Figure 2c).
The highest values of SFFGAE (52.5–103.8%) were in Germany, Poland, Denmark, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, whereas the lowest values (30.3–63.8%) were in Finland, Sweden, and Norway. All of the countries except for Lithuania and Norway showed a decreasing trend in SFFGAE. In 2010, the shutdown of a nuclear power plant led to a steady increase in SFFGAE in Lithuania. This nuclear power plant was designed to provide about 40% of the power consumption of the Baltic states [22]. However, between 2004 and 2012, the increases in emissions per capita were due to increases in economic activity for the Baltic States and to variations in the energy mix only for Lithuania [23].
We considered energy statistics (energy efficiency and SFFGAE), and GDP per capita (Table A1) to be proxies of anthropogenic activities related to emissions. Therefore, we investigated these indicators as potential predictors of the AOD in the atmosphere over each city, specifically the anthropogenic AOD of aerosol components.

2.2. MERRA-2

MERRA-2 [12] was introduced to replace the original MERRA reanalysis because of the advances made in the assimilation system (https://gmao.gsfc.nasa.gov/reanalysis/MERRA-2/, accessed on 4 September 2023). Table 1 synthesises the MERRA-2’s main features. The MERRA-2 dataset covers the period 1980 to present with assimilations of both aerosol and meteorological observations. For the assimilation of meteorological observations, MERRA-2 is based on the Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS-5) version 5.12.4, comprising the GEOS atmospheric model [24,25], the grid point statistical interpolation analysis system [26,27], and a horizontal discretisation on the cubed sphere grid by Putman and Lin [28]. The horizontal resolution is 0.5° × 0.625°.
The Goddard chemistry, aerosol, radiation, and transport (GOCART) model [29,30] is integrated into the GEOS atmospheric model of the emission, sink, and chemistry of the main aerosol species, with specialised modules for emissions, chemistry, advection, planetary boundary-layer turbulent mixing, dry and wet depositions, and moist convection. The GOCART model assumes external mixing with no interactions of the different aerosol species [29]. GOCART speciation includes mineral dust (DU), sea salt (SS), sulphate (SO4), hydrophobic and hydrophilic organic carbon (OC), and black carbon (BC).
MERRA-2 assimilates bias-corrected AOD observations from the spaceborne Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR; 1979–2002; [31]), MODIS on Terra 2000–present, and Aqua 2002–present [19,20], the Multiangle Imaging Spectro Radiometer (MISR; 2000–2014; [32]) and the ground-based Aerosol Robotics Network (AERONET; 1999–2014; [33]).
The annual mean total AOD and speciated AODs at 550 nm were also used for this study.
Table 1. Resume of the MERRA-2 main features adapted from Lacima et al. [34].
Table 1. Resume of the MERRA-2 main features adapted from Lacima et al. [34].
Coverage period1980–present
Spatial resolution0.5° × 0.625° (∼50 km)
Assimilation system3DVar Gridpoint Statistical Interpolation [26,27]
MeteorologyGEOS-5 [24,25]
ChemistryGOCART [29,30]
Anthropogenic emissionsAeroCom Phase II (HCA0 v1; [35]), EDGARv4.2 [36,37]
Biomass burning emissions RETRO v2 [38], GFEDv3.1 [39,40], QFED 2.4-r6 [41]
Biogenic emissions Biogenic non-methane volatile organic compounds [42]
Volcanic emissions AeroCom Phase II (HCA0 v2; [35])
Assimilated aerosol products AVHRR, AERONET, MISR, MODIS

Methodology for Emission Sources in MERRA-2

In MERRA-2 the AOD at 550 nm is the only property directly constrained by the data assimilation system if AOD observations are available. Aerosol speciation is indirectly constrained by this assimilation and strongly controlled by lower boundary conditions (i.e., emissions inventories) [43], the parameterisation of the model’s physics, and error covariance assumptions [12]. Gupta et al. [8] reported high correlation values (above 0.6) between the MERRA-2 and AERONET AOD datasets between 2001 and 2020 around the world. Randles et al. [44] pointed out that trends of both the total and the main aerosol species AODs may be affected by data availability and coverage, and changes in the observing system or the emissions inventories.
For the GOCART model [29,30], the authors set the height of emissions depending on the types of sources. Specifically, emissions of dust and sea salt come from surface sources. Anthropogenic emissions occur above or below 100 m. Biomass burning emissions are evenly distributed in the planetary boundary layer with respect to the grid cells where the biomass burning occurred. Volcanic emissions are modelled according to the magnitude of the eruption and the altitude of the volcano.
Anthropogenic emissions of SO2 are based on the Emissions Database for Global Atmospheric Research (EDGAR), Version 4.3.2 database [45] updated until 2012 and repeated in MERRA-2 in the following years. The AeroCom Phase II dataset (HCA0 v1) [35] provides anthropogenic emissions of OC, BC, and primary SO4 aerosols, including aircraft SO2 emissions. AeroCom Phase II was updated until 2006. Emissions of OC, BC, and SO4 aerosols from oceangoing vessels are drawn from a database compiled by Eyring et al. [46] and updated until 2007.
It is important to point out that MERRA-2 repeats the emissions recorded in the databases (e.g., EDGAR version 4.3.2 [45], AeroCom Phase II [35]) to account for the years when those databases were no longer bring updated [44]. Lacima et al. [34] reported an increasing overestimation of surface concentrations of SO2 from the MERRA-2 reanalysis compared to measured surface concentrations from monitoring stations on the European continent from 2003 to 2020. These authors suggested that this bias may arise from the last available update of the MERRA-2 anthropogenic SO2 emission databases (i.e., AeroCom Phase II and EDGAR 4.3.2) and propagate until the next emission inventory updates.
Both dust and sea salt emission schemes are wind-dependent. Dust emissions depend on soil size distribution, the roughness lengths, and the threshold wind friction velocity as described in Marticorena and Bergametti [47]. The sea salt emission scheme is parameterised according to Gong [48] and corrected considering the dependency of the emissions on sea surface temperature as described in the work by Jaeglé et al. [49].
The emission of biogenic non-methane volatile organic compounds varies with solar radiation and temperature depending on the ecosystems and the plant types [42].
Estimates of the emissions resulting from biomass burning are based on different databases depending on the time frame between 1980 and the present. From 1980 to 1996, the monthly mean biomass burning emissions of carbonaceous aerosol and SO2 relies on RETROv2 emissions [38]) based on an aerosol index derived from TOMS (Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer; [50]), and fire data from AVHRR and ATSR (Along Track Scanning Radiometers; [51]). For biomass burning emissions between 1997 and 2009, MERRA-2 relies on the Global Fire Emissions Database (GFED), Version 3.1 [39,40], which is based on satellite data and a biogeochemical model. Starting from 2010, the estimates of the daily mean emissions of carbonaceous aerosol, SO2, CO, and CO2 from biomass burning are based on the Quick Fire Emissions Dataset (QFED) version 2.4-r6 [41], with fire radiative power data and the locations of fires drawn from MODIS [52].
Daily volcanic emissions of SO2 both from eruptive and degassing volcanoes are based on the AEROsol COMparisons between Observations and Models (AeroCom) Phase II project data [35] gathered from 1979 to 2010. From 2010 forward, only degassing volcanoes are considered. No eruptive volcanoes are included in the data after 2009.
Considering the 1989–2012 period, emissions of SO2, NOX, CO, and PM2.5 decreased in 28 EU countries, according to EDGAR v4.3.2 [45].

2.3. MODIS and MISR

The MODIS sensors aboard the Terra and Aqua satellites provide a near-daily global coverage on a 1° × 1° grid, using 36 spectral bands in the range of 410–15,000 nm and a 2330 km screening swath [53]. For MODIS sensors, the Deep Blue algorithm retrieves aerosols over bright surfaces including urban areas at 412 and 470 nm [54]. AOD is measured over dark surfaces (ocean and vegetated lands) through the Dark Target algorithm [20,55]. The merged Dark Target and Deep Blue AOD dataset allows us to extend the spatial coverage of these two algorithms [56]. For this study, we considered the monthly Level-3 MODIS combined Dark Target and Deep Blue AOD at 550 nm, which was collected from the Terra satellite. The MISR instrument aboard the Terra spacecraft provides global coverage data every nine days for a spatial resolution of up to 275 m through nine discrete cameras spanning from 0 to 70.5 degrees in the forward and backward directions, and it uses the 555 nm retrieval wavelengths for AOD measurements [57].
Depending on the sensors, different time spans were available for comparisons with annual mean total AODs from MERRA-2. Specifically, annual mean total AODs were available for the time ranges 2001–2019 and 2001–2017 from MODIS and MISR, respectively.

2.4. Statistical Analysis and Calculations

For describing the response variables (i.e., the annual mean total and SO4 AODs), we considered the following potential predictive variables: annual data of GDP, energy efficiency, and SFFGAE. Stepwise linear regression was used to select the predictive variables most significant in explaining the total and SO4 AOD datasets as previously presented in a work by Mancinelli et al. [58]. This method considers the selected predictive variables depending on their statistical significance in explaining the response variables through an iteration of multiple regressions [59]. Specifically, an initial model is replaced by the new starting model if the new model fits the dataset with a constant and a predictive variable with a p-value below the threshold [60]. A term is added to the model for a p-value below 0.05 because this allows us to reject the null hypothesis that the term would have a zero coefficient if added to the model. A term is removed from the model for a p-value above 0.1 because this allows us to accept the null hypothesis that the term has a zero coefficient. The coefficient of determination (R2) spans between 0 and 1, with higher R2 values if more variability in the response variable is explained by the predictive variables.
In Figure 2, it is evident that the data of the predictive variables are sparse and do not cover the entire study period (i.e., 1989–2019). Therefore, we considered the time from 2000 to 2019 for all the capitals apart from the capitals with predictive variables available for a shorter time span [i.e., Oslo (2005–2019) and Copenhagen (2007–2019)].

3. Results

3.1. Spatial Distribution of Anomalies in Sulphur Oxides, Organic, and Black Carbon Emissions from MERRA-2 Database between 2019 and 1989–2018

The emissions anomalies of SOX, OC, and BC were calculated between 2019 and 1989–2018 for the study domain based on the MERRA-2 emissions database (Figure 3, Figure 4 and Figure 5).
Anomalies of anthropogenic emissions of SO2 and SO4 (Figure 3a,c) were in relatively limited areas compared to the anomalies in SO2 from biomass burning (Figure 3b). The highest anomalies in OC emissions originated in biomass burning, with up to 1 and 5 orders of magnitude higher values than the anomalies related to anthropogenic and biogenic emissions, respectively (Figure 4). Anomalies in BC emissions from biomass burning were about 1 order of magnitude larger than the anomalies in anthropogenic emissions of BC (Figure 5). According to Yang et al. [61], between 2010 and 2018 the average contribution of European emissions was 32–47% to the SO4 AOD and 57–75% to the BC AOD levels over Europe.
Eastern Europe and the Baltic States showed negative anomalies in anthropogenic emissions of SO2 (Figure 3a), SO4 (Figure 3c), OC (Figure 4a), and BC (Figure 5a). Reductions in SOX emissions from shipping occurred with the entry into force of MARPOL Annex VI, which set more stringent limits on the sulphur content of marine fuel in 2005 and 2015 in the Baltic Sea and North Sea (Figure A1). However, at the national level the contribution of shipping to total SOX emissions was negligible compared to other emission sectors such as public power, industry, and other stationary combustion (Figure A1 and Figure A2).
Negative anomalies in anthropogenic emissions of SO2 (Figure 3a) and SO4 (Figure 3c) appeared in Germany, Denmark, and Scandinavia, whereas anomalies in anthropogenic emissions were positive for OC and BC in Western Europe and a limited area between Denmark, Sweden, and Norway (Figure 4a and Figure 5a). Anomalies in emissions of SO2 (Figure 3b), OC (Figure 4b), and BC (Figure 5b) from biomass burning showed negative values in Southern Finland and the Baltic States. Positive biomass burning emissions anomalies appeared in Germany and Norway as hotspots, and as relatively large areas in non-European countries such as Ukraine and the Russian Federation.

3.2. Spatial Distribution of Mean Total and Main Aerosol Species AODs

Figure 6 maps the mean total and main aerosol species AODs in the study domain from 1989 to 2019. A gradient is clear for the maps of mean total and SO4, BC, OC, and dust AODs, with higher values at lower latitudes compared to higher latitudes in line with the findings by Saponaro et al. [62]. Mean total and SO4 AODs hotspot areas were located around the regions in Poland (e.g., Silesia) and the Czech Republic (e.g., Moravia-Silesia) that have high-emitting industries. Filonchyk et al. [6] related the relatively high AOD values over Polish cities to the concentration of ferrous and non-ferrous, chemical, and mining industries. The mean OC AOD values were highest over the southeastern part of the domain (e.g., Ukraine and Belarus). Central and Western Europe showed the highest BC AOD levels (Figure 6d). The lowest mean total (Figure 6a), SO4 (Figure 6b), OC (Figure 6c) and BC (Figure 6d) AOD levels were over the Scandinavian Mountains.
The spatial trend of mean dust AOD values likely reflected the distance from the Sahara Desert (i.e., the main source of desert dust for Europe) (Figure 6f). The highest values of mean SS AOD were above the Scandinavian peninsula because of more favourable conditions of SS formation compared to the relatively shallow and enclosed Baltic Sea (Figure 6e).

3.3. Yearly Mean AOD of Total Aerosol and the Main Aerosol Species

Figure 7 shows the yearly mean AOD trendlines of total and SO4 AODs by MERRA-2 and the spaceborne aerosol observations derived from MODIS and MISR over the capitals of the Baltic Sea basin for the time range 1989–2019. The spaceborne aerosol observations are depicted in the dashed orange (MODIS) and purple (MISR) lines in the time ranges 2001–2019 and 2001–2017, respectively. Over each city, the MODIS AOD was generally higher than the MISR AOD. This is in line with the results reported by Zhao et al. [63] about AOD values retrieved with MISR and MODIS over different regions, including Western Europe for a ten-year period (2007–2016). Mehta et al. [4] reported negative annual AOD trends over the European continent and the Mediterranean Sea from 2001 to 2014, with a higher decrease in total AOD for MODIS compared to MISR.
From 1989 to 2019, the MERRA-2 total and SO4 AODs are shown in continuous lines. For each capital, the yearly mean SO4 AOD (in yellow diamond markers) was the main aerosol species with a trend specular to yearly mean total AOD (in blue pentagram).
Analysing Figure 7, it may be noted that the MERRA-2 yearly mean total AOD values were in the range of 0.095–0.354, with the peak values associated with the Pinatubo eruption in 1991 [64,65].
A peak in the total and SO4 AODs is clear for each capital in 1992. This was due to the dispersion of the volcanic plume that originated from the eruption of Mount Pinatubo (Philippines) in June 1991. Previous studies [2,66] reported the effects of the Mount Pinatubo eruption on the total and SO4 AOD levels based on the MERRA-2 reanalysis around the world. Sun et al. [66] estimated an increase in total AOD over China for ten months followed by an 8-month-long decrease to AOD levels comparable to those measured before the eruption. Rizza et al. [2] reported variations in SO4 AOD levels from July 1991 to December 1993 over five Italian cities. However, in MERRA-2 the representation of stratospheric aerosol produced from SO2 oxidation after major volcanic eruptions may be biased by quality data of key eruption source parameters (i.e., plume height, injection magnitude, and mass eruption rate) [43,67]. After the eruption of Mount Pinatubo, MERRA-2 overestimated the total AOD and underestimated the AOD of non-sulphate aerosol species because the same extinction coefficient was assumed for different sulphate aerosols irrespective of the size distribution [44].
For the selected cities, the mean MERRA-2 total AOD values were highest for the continental cities (Warsaw > Berlin > Vilnius) and the lowest for coastal cities such as Stockholm and Oslo (Table 2). The mean MERRA-2 total AOD values were comparably higher over coastal cities such as Copenhagen, Riga, Helsinki, and Tallinn.
Annual mean BC AODs were in the range of 0.005–0.014 (black colour at the bottom of each panel in Figure 8). Except for Warsaw, the mean BC AOD was the aerosol species with the lowest level (Table 2) for the time range considered. OC AODs (orange colour in Figure 8) ranged between 0.11 and 0.063. Natural aerosols species showed a similar trend, with dust (yellow hexagram markers) and SS (blue triangle marker) AODs values between 0.006 and 0.037.
The order of magnitude of the mean OC, DU, and SS AOD species differed for the selected cities (Table 2). Mean SS AODs were lower than mean OC, and DU AODs both for the continental cities and the coastal cities such as Oslo, Riga, and Tallinn. Over the continental cities, the mean OC AODs were comparable to mean DU AODs, whereas mean OC AODs were higher than mean DU AODs over Oslo, Riga, and Tallinn. The mean DU AODs were lower than the mean SS and OC AODs over coastal cities such as Copenhagen, Helsinki, and Stockholm. These cities differed in the magnitude of the mean OC and SS AOD species, with the mean OC AODs higher or comparable to the mean SS AODs over Helsinki and Stockholm, respectively, and the mean SS AOD higher than the mean OC AOD over Copenhagen.

3.4. Percentage Contributions of the Main Aerosol Species to Total AOD

In each capital, the percentage contribution of the SO4 AOD to the total AOD peaked in 1992, the year following the eruption of Mount Pinatubo, with values in the range of 80.1–85.8% of the total AOD (Figure 9). Table 3 reports the mean and range of contribution in the percentage of the main aerosol species to the total AOD for each capital.
Our analysis of the percentage contributions of the main aerosol species to the total AOD over Warsaw is comparable to Markowicz et al. [68], who reported the mean AOD composition over Poland to be dominated by the SO4 AOD (70%), followed by the OC and DU AODs (10% each), BC AOD (5%), and SS AOD (4%) between 1982 and 2015, based on MERRA-2 reanalysis.
We conclude that for all of the capitals, the composition of aerosols changed with respect to the species of anthropogenic origins, with a decrease in the percentage contribution of the SO4 AOD and an increase in the percentage contribution of the BC AOD to the total AOD. For Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm, and the continental capitals, the OC AOD percentage also showed an increasing trend. Variations in the composition of the AOD over Europe were also observed in previous studies [3,11] for the first two decades of the 21st century.

3.5. Percentage Contributions of the Main Aerosol Species of Anthropogenic and Natural Origins to Total AOD

Figure 10 shows the time series of the percentage contributions of the main aerosol species of anthropogenic (i.e., SO4 + BC + OC) and natural (i.e., DU + SS) origins to the total AOD over the capitals of the study area.
Anthropogenic aerosols contributed the most to the total AOD over all the capitals, with percentages in the range of 66.4–90.3%. The highest values in the percentage of anthropogenic AOD were over the continental capitals, whereas the lowest value in the percentage of anthropogenic AOD was over Copenhagen.
Previous studies [5,6] reported the predominance of fine particles of anthropogenic origins in AOD over Eastern countries including Poland between 2000–2019. According to Zhao et al. [63], particles of anthropogenic origins (polluted continental/dust) are the dominant aerosol type above Western Europe, including Denmark, Germany, and a limited portion of Norway and Sweden based on analysis of data drawn from CALIPSO retrievals from 2007 to 2016.
The minimum in the percentage contribution of anthropogenic AOD appeared in 2008 for all capitals except Helsinki and Tallinn, with the minimum in 2007. This was likely due to the global financial crisis in 2008 and the so-called Great Recession from December 2007 to June 2009.
Together with the economic crisis of 2008–2009, variations in the aerosol composition over Vilnius likely resulted from changes in the energy sector following the shutdown of the Ignalina nuclear power plant in Lithuania in 2009. Between 2009 and 2019, carbon intensity consistently increased in Lithuania (Figure 2d).

3.6. Annual Trends

3.6.1. Annual Trends in MERRA-2 Anthropogenic Emissions of SO2, Black Carbon, and Organic Carbon

We estimated the yearly trends in anthropogenic emissions of SO2, BC, and OC from the capitals of the Baltic Sea basin based on the MERRA-2 database in the time range 1989–2019 (Figure 11 and Figure 12).
Anthropogenic emissions of SO2 significantly decreased in each capital, with all of the capitals except Oslo in the range of −0.01 and −0.03 [kg m−2 s−1 year−1], 0.54–0.89 R2, and p-values far below 0.0001 (Table A2). Anthropogenic emissions of BC and OC showed a significant decreasing trend in each capital except Copenhagen. The highest decreases in anthropogenic BC and OC emissions were in Helsinki, the capitals of the Baltic states, and Warsaw, with R2s in the range of 0.19–0.53, p-values below 0.01, and rates of decrease between −0.01 and −0.02 [kg m−2 s−1 year−1] (Table A2). According to Yang et al. [61], SO2 and BC emissions decreased by 84–93% and 43–62% in 2014–2018 compared with 1980–1984 in northwestern and eastern Europe.
Variations in anthropogenic emissions of BC, OC (Figure 12), and SO2 (Figure 11) mainly occurred between 1989 and 2005. No substantial changes in anthropogenic emissions occurred between 2005 and 2019. In the 1990s, all of the capitals except Oslo and Stockholm showed sharp decreases in anthropogenic emissions of SO2 (Figure 11). Moreover, in the 1990s sharp decreases in anthropogenic emissions of BC and OC occurred in Helsinki, the capitals of the Baltic states, and Warsaw (Figure 12).

3.6.2. Annual Trends in the Main Aerosol Species and Total AODs

From 1989 to 2019, the MERRA-2 total and SO4 AODs showed a significant decreasing trend for all the capitals (Table A3).
For the decreasing trends in total AOD, values of R2 were in the range of 0.29–0.6, p-values below 0.003, and rates of decrease between −0.3 and −1.6% year−1 (Table A3). The decreasing trends in SO4 AOD showed p-values far below 0.00001, R2 in the range 0.49–0.73, and rates of variation between −0.9 and −2% year−1. Cities with the highest mean yearly total and SO4 AODs (Table 2), such as Warsaw and Vilnius, showed the highest rate of yearly decrease in total and SO4 AODs (Table A3). Oslo was the city with the lowest mean yearly total and SO4 AODs (Table 2) and the lowest rate of yearly decrease in total and SO4 AODs (Table A3). This means that the decrease in total AOD was mainly due to a decrease in SO4 AOD.
By contrast, both the OC and BC AODs significantly increased over Berlin, Copenhagen, and Oslo, with BC AOD an order of magnitude lower compared with the OC AOD. Moreover, the BC AOD significantly increased over Stockholm. Provençal et al. [1] observed that the SO4, OC, and BC AOD trends are likely to be similar, because fossil fuel combustion is a major source of these anthropogenic AOD species. Therefore, it is likely that the increasing trends in OC and BC AODs for Berlin, Copenhagen, Oslo, and Stockholm were due to biomass combustion for heating purposes or because of wildfires. Smoke plumes over Eastern, Western, and Northern Europe often originate from forest and peat fires or agricultural and pastoral burning in Russia and Ukraine in spring, summer, and autumn [5].
It is important to point out that the observed decreases in the total and SO4 AODs mainly occurred in the 1990s over the selected capitals. Figure A2 shows a sharp decrease in total SOX emissions for the countries in the Baltic Sea basin. Yang et al. [61] related the lower SO4 AOD levels between 1980–1984 and 2014–2018 in Europe to decreases in local European sources for about 89% of the differences, and only 9% and 7% to decreases in emissions from the Russian Federation-Belarus-Ukraine and North America, respectively. For the time range 2000–2021, our results align with Di Antonio et al. [7] who did not observe any statistical trends for the AOD from MAIAC over Copenhagen, Oslo, and Stockholm. For these cities, this is clearly shown by comparing the time series of the total and SO4 AODs between the time ranges of 1989–1999 and 2000–2019 (Figure 7b,d,f). Markowicz et al. [68] reported a negative trend for total the AOD over different regions of Poland including Warsaw (−0.06 per decade) between 1982 and 2015, with the AOD composition showing a similar negative trend in the SO4 AOD, and a small positive trend in OC. In Poland, in the 1991–2000 decade the reduction in industrial emissions likely led to a strong decrease (−0.17/10 year) in AOD levels [68], whereas a shift of the energy mix to green fuel for residential heating likely originated a slight decrease (−0.02/10 year) in the AOD levels from 2011 to 2019 [14].

3.6.3. Annual Trends in the Percentage Contributions of the Main Aerosol Species to the Total AOD

We evaluated the trend in the percentage contributions of the main aerosol species to the total AOD, excluding the time range 1991–1993 because of the perturbation in the percentage distribution of AOD species occurring with the dispersion and deposition of SO4 related to the Mount Pinatubo eruption (Table A4).
In this time range, all of the capitals showed a significant decreasing trend in the percentage contribution of the SO4 AOD to the total AOD, with R2 values in the range of 0.53–0.78 and p-values far below 0.001. By contrast, the percentage contribution of the BC AOD to the total AOD significantly increased over all the capitals, with R2 values in the range of 0.73–0.85 and p-values far below 0.001.
The capitals differed in the trend of the percentage contribution of the OC AOD to the total AOD, with some capitals showing no trend (i.e., Helsinki) or a slight increasing trend (i.e., Riga, and Tallinn with R2 up to 0.20 and p-value equal to 0.201 and 0.168, respectively), and the other capitals showing significant increasing trends with R2 values in the range of 0.42–0.76 and p-values < 0.001.
The percentage contribution of aerosol components of natural origins to the total AOD did not show any remarkable trend over the capitals, except for an increasing trend in the percentage contribution of the SS AOD to the total AOD over Helsinki and Stockholm. Specifically, the percentage contribution of the SS AOD to the total AOD showed no trend over Oslo and Vilnius, a slight increasing trend over Berlin, Copenhagen, Warsaw, and Riga (R2 values < 0.25 and p-values up to 0.03), and an increasing trend over Helsinki and Stockholm with an R2 equal to 0.30 and 0.39, respectively, and p-values < 0.001. The percentage contribution of the dust AOD to the total AOD showed no trend over Berlin, Oslo, and Stockholm and a slight increasing trend over the other capitals with R2 value up to 0.28 and p-values < 0.05. The work by Logothetis et al. [69] analysed the MODIS dust aerosol fine-resolution dataset and found a slight decreasing trend for the dust optical depth over the Mediterranean area between 2003 and 2017.

3.6.4. Annual Trends in the Percentage Contributions of Anthropogenic and Natural AOD to the Total AOD

From 1989 to 2008, anthropogenic AOD as a percentage of the total AOD showed a significant decreasing trend for all the capitals, with R2 in the range 0.6–0.88, p-values far below 0.0001, and rate of yearly decrease between −0.4 and −0.7 (Table A5). The percentage contribution of natural aerosols to the total AOD showed a reverse trend in each city, with R2 in the range of 0.6–0.88, p-values far below 0.0001, and a yearly increase rate between 0.4 and 0.7.
According to Naqvi [15], European regions experienced a decoupling of economic growth and emissions of NH3, NOX, PM10, PM2.5, and SO2 between 1995 and 2008, whereas several EU regions showed a coupling or a slight decoupling from 2008 to 2015.

3.6.5. Annual Trends in the Total and SO4 AOD Described with Predictive Variables

Based on the stepwise linear regression method, we evaluated a set of independent variables (i.e., annual data of GDP per capita, energy efficiency, and SFFGAE) in describing the total and SO4 AOD levels over the capitals from 2000 to 2019.
Annual data of SFFGAE and time were predictive variables for both the total and SO4 AODs, whereas annual data of GDP per capita were predictive variables only for the SO4 AOD. No relationships were found between the annual data of energy efficiency at the national level and the total and SO4 AOD values over each capital.
Figure 13 shows the total and SO4 AODs plotted versus the significant (p < 0.05) predictive variables for Helsinki, Oslo, Stockholm, Tallinn, and Vilnius from 2000 to 2019.
There were direct relationships between SFFGAE in Sweden and the total AOD over Stockholm (Figure 13a). Therefore, the higher the annual values of SFFGAE, the higher the total AOD levels over Stockholm.
The SO4 AOD over Helsinki can be represented with a linear equation with the SFFGAE of Finland (Figure 13b). Therefore, the higher the annual values of SFFGAE, the higher the SO4 AOD levels over Helsinki.
GDP per capita was the predictive variable of the SO4 AOD over Oslo, Stockholm, Tallinn, and Vilnius, with inverse relationships and R2s in the range 0.31–0.70 (Figure 13c). Therefore, the higher the annual values of GDP per capita, the lower the SO4 AOD levels over Oslo, Stockholm, Tallinn, and Vilnius.
The total and SO4 AOD confirmed a decreasing linear trend with time for Berlin and Warsaw (Table A6), as presented in Paragraph 3.6.2. For Copenhagen, there was no relationship between the total and SO4 AODs and the set of independent variables.

4. Conclusions

This study analysed the trends of total aerosol and the main aerosol species over the capitals of nine countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019 based on the Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications, Version 2 reanalysis. Aerosol speciation includes both natural [mineral dust (DU) and sea salt (SS)] and anthropogenic [sulphate (SO4), organic carbon (OC), and black carbon (BC)] aerosols.
The mean total AOD values were the highest over the continental capitals (i.e., Warsaw, Berlin, and Vilnius), with values in the range 0.190–0.216, followed by the coastal capitals, namely Copenhagen, Riga, and Helsinki (0.164 and 0.174), and Tallinn, Stockholm, and Oslo (0.125–0.159).
For each capital, the mean SO4 AOD was the main aerosol species, following a trend specular to total AOD. Apart from Warsaw, the mean BC AOD was the aerosol species with the lowest level. The orders of magnitude of mean OC, DU, and SS AODs differed across the capitals.
Over all the capitals, the composition of the aerosols changed with respect to the species of anthropogenic origins, with the percentage contributions to the total AOD decreasing for the SO4 AODs and increasing for the BC AODs. For Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm, and the continental capitals, the OC AOD also showed an increase in its percentage contribution to the total AOD.
Anthropogenic aerosols contributed the most to the total AOD over all the capitals, with percentages in the range 66.4–90.3%. The highest values in the percentage of anthropogenic AODs were over the continental capitals, whereas the lowest value in the percentage of anthropogenic AOD was over Copenhagen. For all of the capitals, the minimum in the percentage contribution of anthropogenic AOD was between 2007 and 2008, likely due to the global financial crisis. Moreover, from 1989 to 2008, anthropogenic AOD as a percentage of the total AOD showed a significant decreasing trend.
From 1989 to 2019, the total and SO4 AODs showed a significant decreasing trend for all of the capitals. Warsaw and Vilnius showed the highest rates of yearly decrease in the total and SO4 AODs, whereas Oslo was the city with the lowest yearly decrease in the total and SO4 AODs. Both the OC and BC AODs significantly increased over Berlin, Copenhagen, and Oslo. Moreover, the BC AOD significantly increased over Stockholm. Analysis of the MERRA-2 anthropogenic emissions database showed significant decreases in SO2 from each capital and BC and OC in each capital except Copenhagen. Therefore, the observed increases in the OC and BC AODs did not result from variations in anthropogenic emissions from Berlin, Copenhagen, Stockholm, and Oslo. The decoupling of carbonaceous aerosols and the SO4 AOD trends was likely due to concurrent factors such as low-sulphur fuel policies and biomass burning in wildfires or for energy production.
To account for the drastic changes in the demographic and economic perspectives that the study area experienced, we considered energy statistics and gross domestic product (GDP) per capita as potential predictors of the anthropogenic AOD components in the atmosphere over each city. In the first two decades of the 21st century, there were direct relationships between SFFGAE in Sweden and the total AOD over Stockholm. Moreover, there were direct relationships between SFFGAE in Finland and the SO4 AOD over Helsinki. On the other hand, there were inverse relationships between the annual values of GDP per capita and the SO4 AOD for Oslo, Stockholm, Tallinn, and Vilnius. Therefore, a relative decoupling between economic growth and the emissions of aerosols from fossil fuel may have occurred for these capitals.
As for caveats and uncertainties associated with this study, it is important to point out that atmospheric aerosol comprises a complex mixture of primary and secondary species whose interactions with chemistry, radiation, land use, and atmospheric circulation patterns cannot be addressed with the methods of the present study. These rather may be the objective of a future specific study utilizing a high (spatial/temporal) resolution chemical transport model.

Author Contributions

Conceptualisation, E.M. and U.R.; methodology, E.M.; validation, E.M.; formal analysis, E.M.; investigation, E.M.; resources, G.P.; data curation, E.M.; writing—original draft preparation, E.M.; writing—review and editing, E.M. and U.R.; visualization, E.M. and S.V.; supervision, G.P. and U.R.; project administration, G.P. and U.R. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Data Availability Statement

The aerosol data set presented in this study is freely available in GIOVANNI (Goddard Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center Interactive Online Visualization ANd aNalysis Infrastructure) at https://giovanni.gsfc.nasa.gov/giovanni/. The population [demo_r_pjanaggr3__custom_8310012], gross domestic product [NAMA_10R_3GDP__custom_8309870], energy efficiency [nrg_ind_eff__custom_8310117], and share of fossil fuels in gross available energy [nrg_ind_ffgae__custom_8310088] data are freely available in EUROSTAT at https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat.

Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge the NASA GES-DISC Interactive Online Visualization and Analysis Infrastructure (GIOVANNI) for providing MERRA-2 reanalysis, MODIS, and MISR satellite aerosol data.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Appendix A

Figure A1. SOX emissions from shipping from the (a) investigated countries in the Baltic Sea basin and (b) the Baltic Sea and North Sea. Own elaboration based on data from EMEP (https://www.ceip.at/webdab-emission-database/emissions-as-used-in-emep-models, accessed on 6 June 2024).
Figure A1. SOX emissions from shipping from the (a) investigated countries in the Baltic Sea basin and (b) the Baltic Sea and North Sea. Own elaboration based on data from EMEP (https://www.ceip.at/webdab-emission-database/emissions-as-used-in-emep-models, accessed on 6 June 2024).
Remotesensing 16 02421 g0a1
Figure A2. Total SOX emissions from (a) Germany and Poland and (b) Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, and Sweden. Own elaboration based on data from EMEP (https://www.ceip.at/webdab-emission-database/emissions-as-used-in-emep-models, accessed on 6 June 2024).
Figure A2. Total SOX emissions from (a) Germany and Poland and (b) Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, and Sweden. Own elaboration based on data from EMEP (https://www.ceip.at/webdab-emission-database/emissions-as-used-in-emep-models, accessed on 6 June 2024).
Remotesensing 16 02421 g0a2
Table A1. Energy statistics and population between 1990 and 2019, and gross domestic product (GDP) between 2000 to 2019 at the national or local levels for the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin.
Table A1. Energy statistics and population between 1990 and 2019, and gross domestic product (GDP) between 2000 to 2019 at the national or local levels for the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin.
NUTS1NUTS3
CityNUTS1Energy Efficiency [Million Tonnes of Oil Equivalent]Share of Fossil Fuel in Gross Available Energy [%]NUTS3Population [–]GDP [EUR/Capita]
CopenhagenDenmark19.08
(16.79–22.26)
84.73
(64.14–99.5)
City of Copenhagen
(province)
716,243
(648,889–784,618)
60,605
(46,300–74,300)
BerlinGermany313.52
(285.24–332.75)
83.649
(80.02–87.72)
Berlin
(district)
3,432,013
(3,278,346–3,644,826)
31,810
(25,900–43,100)
HelsinkiFinland32.07
(25.58–36.67)
55.93
(42.79–63.83)
Helsinki-Uusimaa
(region)
1,439,831
(1,219,864–1,671,024)
46,720
(36,300–56,800)
OsloNorway24.99
(19.02–31.0)
56.66
(51.98–62.04)
Oslo
(county)
609,141
(529,846–681,067)
94,958
(76,700–104,700)
RigaLatvia4.71
(3.79–7.87)
67.43
(59.83–83.94)
Riga
(statistical region)
679,524
(632,614–753,006)
15,760
(6100–26,000)
StockholmSweden47.15
(43.06–50.47)
37.68
(30.29–41.14)
Stockholm County
(county)
2,029,720
(1,803,377–2,344,124)
55,725
(42,300–65,700)
TallinnEstonia5.64
(4.33–10.49)
91.0
(73.24–103.79)
Northern Estonia
(group of counties)
557,428
(532,800–599,478)
17,350
(6600–28,600)
VilniusLithuania8.0
(5.75–16.15)
63.94
(52.48–77.94)
Vilnius County
(county)
822,094
(805,173–850,668)
14,090
(4900–25,500)
WarsawPoland93.37
(84.85–104.06)
94.5
(87.18–98.89)
City of Warsaw
(subregion)
1,686,517
(1,618,468–1,775,986)
25,795
(13,900–41,000)
NUTS–nomenclature of territorial units for statistics. GDP–gross domestic product. Values are shown as mean, and minimum–maximum in parenthesis. Values of population refer to the time range 2007–2019 for the City of Copenhagen, 2005–2019 for Oslo, 2001–2019 for Riga and Vilnius County, and 2000–2019 for Berlin, Stockholm County, and Northern Estonia. Values of GDP refer to the time range 2008–2019 for Oslo. Own elaboration based on data from EUROSTAT (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat, accessed on 22 January 2023).
Table A2. Coefficients of the linear fit y = a + bx, R2, p-value, and rate of variation of anthropogenic emissions of SO2, black and organic carbon for the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019.
Table A2. Coefficients of the linear fit y = a + bx, R2, p-value, and rate of variation of anthropogenic emissions of SO2, black and organic carbon for the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019.
CitySO2 anthropogenic emissions [kg m−2 s−1]Rate of variation [kg m−2 s−1 year−1] × 10−2
abR2p-value
Berlin3.59 × 10−8−1.78 × 10−110.680.0000−2.5
Copenhagen1.75 × 10−8−8.62 × 10−120.780.0000−2.5
Helsinki9.1 × 10−9−4.41 × 10−120.810.0000−1.3
Oslo1.16 × 10−9−4.94 × 10−130.150.0314−0.6
Riga1.65 × 10−8−8.22 × 10−120.640.0000−3.1
Stockholm3.34 × 10−8−1.64 × 10−110.880.0000−1.6
Tallinn1.53 × 10−8−7.56 × 10−120.540.0000−2.8
Vilnius1.46 × 10−8−7.25 × 10−120.610.0000−3.1
Warsaw3.04 × 10−8−1.50 × 10−110.890.0000−2.0
CityBC anthropogenic emissions [kg m−2 s−1] Rate of variation [kg m−2 s−1 year−1] × 10−2
abR2p-value
Berlin−1.27 × 10−119.22 × 10−150.140.0378−0.2
Copenhagen−2.16 × 10−111.27 × 10−140.460.00000.0
Helsinki2.88 × 10−11−1.30 × 10−140.190.0131−0.9
Oslo−7.30 × 10−124.84 × 10−150.230.0071−0.1
Riga1.13 × 10−10−5.55 × 10−140.460.0000−2.4
Stockholm−5.57 × 10−123.70 × 10−150.220.0074−0.1
Tallinn7.29 × 10−11−3.54 × 10−140.40.0001−1.7
Vilnius1.01 × 10−10−4.96 × 10−140.460.0000−2.4
Warsaw1.57 × 10−10−7.45 × 10−140.320.0000−1.4
CityOC anthropogenic emissions [kg m−2 s−1]Rate of variation [kg m−2 s−1 year−1] × 10−2
abR2p-value
Berlin3.11 × 10−11−1.30 × 10−140.290.0017−0.4
Copenhagen−1.77 × 10−111.22 × 10−140.290.00170.0
Helsinki1.31 × 10−10−6.21 × 10−140.450.0000−1.0
Oslo2.25 × 10−11−8.77 × 10−150.20.0118−0.3
Riga5.83 × 10−10−2.87 × 10−130.530.0000−2.3
Stockholm2.10 × 10−11−8.27 × 10−150.20.0089−0.3
Tallinn3.23 × 10−10−1.58 × 10−130.510.0000−1.9
Vilnius3.08 × 10−10−1.52 × 10−130.530.0000−2.3
Warsaw3.72 × 10−10−1.78 × 10−130.460.0000−0.9
For each city, n = 31.
Table A3. Coefficients of the linear fit y = a + bx, R2, p-value, and rate of variation for the main aerosol species and total AOD over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019.
Table A3. Coefficients of the linear fit y = a + bx, R2, p-value, and rate of variation for the main aerosol species and total AOD over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019.
CityTotal AOD Rate of variation [total AOD year−1] × 10−3
abR2p-value
Berlin4.75−0.00230.540.0000−3.3
Copenhagen3.94−0.00190.510.0000−1.8
Helsinki5.18−0.00250.490.0000−3.5
Oslo2.02−0.00100.290.0033−0.4
Riga5.78−0.00280.540.0000−3.9
Stockholm4.08−0.00200.550.0000−2.4
Tallinn5.07−0.00250.500.0000−3.4
Vilnius5.97−0.00290.550.0000−4.5
Warsaw6.11−0.00290.600.0000−4.6
CitySO4 AOD Rate of variation [SO4 AOD year−1] × 10−3
abR2p-value
Berlin5.29−0.00260.700.0000−3.3
Copenhagen4.52−0.00220.690.0000−2.1
Helsinki4.37−0.00210.620.0000−2.7
Oslo2.63−0.00130.490.0000−0.8
Riga5.22−0.00260.680.0000−3.4
Stockholm4.05−0.00200.710.0000−1.9
Tallinn4.54−0.00220.630.0000−2.8
Vilnius5.96−0.00290.720.0000−4.0
Warsaw6.37−0.00310.730.0000−4.2
CityBC AOD Rate of variation [BC AOD year−1] × 10−5
abR2p-value
Berlin−0.1740.00010.400.00033.3
Copenhagen−0.1580.00010.440.00016.4
Helsinki0.0070.0000
Oslo−0.1210.00010.500.00006.7
Riga0.00760.0000
Stockholm−0.1010.00010.310.00224.2
Tallinn0.0070.0000
Vilnius0.0080.0000
Warsaw0.0110.0000
CityOC AOD Rate of variation [OC AOD year−1] × 10−4
abR2p-value
Berlin−0.5110.00030.280.00381.2
Copenhagen−0.5100.00030.310.00222.3
Helsinki0.0230.0000
Oslo−0.5360.00030.400.00033.2
Riga0.02360.0000
Stockholm0.01930.0000
Tallinn0.02180.0000
Vilnius0.02490.0000
Warsaw0.0260.0000
Values relative to the time range 1991–1993 were excluded. For each city, n = 28.
Table A4. Coefficients of the linear fit y = a + bx, R2, p-value, and rate of variation for the percentage contribution of the main aerosol species to total AOD over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019.
Table A4. Coefficients of the linear fit y = a + bx, R2, p-value, and rate of variation for the percentage contribution of the main aerosol species to total AOD over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019.
CitySO4 AOD [%]Rate of variation in SO4 AOD [% year−1]
abR2p-value
Berlin1250.4−0.59270.760.00000.6
Copenhagen1356.8−0.64860.780.00000.6
Helsinki963.73−0.45240.530.00000.4
Oslo1241.1−0.59050.670.00000.4
Riga1090.7−0.51460.640.00000.6
Stockholm1311.8−0.62590.770.00000.5
Tallinn1082.8−0.5115 0.620.00000.5
Vilnius1197.8−0.56630.760.00000.5
Warsaw1160.7−0.54680.610.00000.5
CityBC AOD [%]Rate of variation in BC AOD [% year−1]
abR2p-value
Berlin−227.30.11630.850.00000.1
Copenhagen−199.30.10200.800.00000.1
Helsinki−147.90.07610.730.00000.1
Oslo−177.30.09100.740.00000.1
Riga−164.30.08430.730.00000.1
Stockholm−176.80.09050.790.00000.1
Tallinn−157.00.08060.730.00000.1
Vilnius−167.40.08590.740.00000.1
Warsaw−179.00.09200.770.00000.1
CityOC AOD [%]Rate of variation in OC AOD [% year−1]
abR2p-value
Berlin−574.10.29230.760.00000.3
Copenhagen−571.70.29110.740.00000.2
Helsinki14.770.0000
Oslo−705.90.36000.710.00000.3
Riga−375.70.19460.200.01660.2
Stockholm−562.80.28760.630.00000.3
Tallinn−316.1 0.16500.170.03000.2
Vilnius−521.50.26710.420.00020.2
Warsaw−479.70.24570.610.00000.2
CitySS AOD [%]Rate of variation in SS AOD [% year−1]
abR2p-value
Berlin−136.2 0.07170.210.01370.1
Copenhagen−266.30.14020.250.00740.1
Helsinki−323.10.16720.300.00250.2
Oslo9.590.0000
Riga−186.70.09770.170.03070.2
Stockholm−288.70.15060.390.00040.1
Tallinn−269.40.13980.730.00000.1
Vilnius5.700.0000
Warsaw−91.30.04770.230.00920.1
CityDU AOD [%]Rate of variation in DU AOD [% year−1]
abR2p-value
Berlin12.350.0000 0.0
Copenhagen−219.6 0.11530.180.02370.1
Helsinki−220.00.11560.140.04690.1
Oslo12.29 0.0000
Riga−264.00.13800.220.01290.1
Stockholm11.530.0000
Tallinn−240.360.12610.160.03230.1
Vilnius−317.40.16490.280.00400.1
Warsaw−310.80.16130.230.01010.2
Values relative to the time range 1991–1993 were excluded. For each city, n = 28.
Table A5. Percentage contribution of the main aerosol species of anthropogenic and natural origins to total aerosol optical depth (AOD) from 1989 to 2019, and trend in anthropogenic and natural AOD percentage contributions to total AOD from 1989 to 2008.
Table A5. Percentage contribution of the main aerosol species of anthropogenic and natural origins to total aerosol optical depth (AOD) from 1989 to 2019, and trend in anthropogenic and natural AOD percentage contributions to total AOD from 1989 to 2008.
CityNatural AOD [%]Anthropogenic AOD [%]Trend in AOD Percentage Contribution to Total AOD from 1989 to 2008
Anthropogenic AODNatural AOD
Mean
(Min–Max)
Mean
(Min–Max)
R2p-ValueRate of Variation [% Year−1]R2p-ValueRate of Variation [% Year−1]
Berlin20.0
(13.9–25.7)
80.0
(74.3–86.1)
0.869.72 × 10−8−0.60.869.72 × 10−80.6
Copenhagen26.4
(19.7–33.6)
73.6
(66.4–80.3)
0.731.14 × 10−5−0.70.731.14 × 10−50.7
Helsinki24.1
(14.6–29.7)
75.9
(70.3–85.4)
0.774.25 × 10−6−0.60.774.25 × 10−60.6
Oslo21.9
(13.2–27.4)
78.1
(72.6–86.8)
0.60.0003−0.40.60.00030.4
Riga22.1
(13.8–27.6)
77.9
(72.4–86.2)
0.782.65 × 10−6−0.60.782.65 × 10−60.6
Stockholm24.8
(16.0–29.3)
75.2
(70.7–84.0)
0.731.43 × 10−5−0.50.731.43 × 10−50.5
Tallinn23.4
(14.6–28.8)
76.6
(71.2–85.4)
0.765.2 × 10−6−0.60.765.2 × 10−60.6
Vilnius19.0
(10.8–24.9)
81.0
(75.0–89.2)
0.868.52 × 10−8−0.60.868.52 × 10−80.6
Warsaw17.2
(9.7–23.5)
82.8
(76.5–90.3)
0.882.85 × 10−8−0.70.869.72 × 10−80.7
Values relative to the time range 1991–1993 were excluded. For each city, n = 28.
Table A6. Coefficients of the linear fit y = a + bx, R2, p-value, number of observations (n) for the response variables (i.e., total and SO4 AOD) and the independent variables [i.e., annual data of gross domestic product (GDP), and share of fossil fuel in gross available energy (SFFGAE)] over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 2000 to 2019.
Table A6. Coefficients of the linear fit y = a + bx, R2, p-value, number of observations (n) for the response variables (i.e., total and SO4 AOD) and the independent variables [i.e., annual data of gross domestic product (GDP), and share of fossil fuel in gross available energy (SFFGAE)] over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 2000 to 2019.
Citynyabx
[Unit of Measurement]
R2p-Value
Berlin20Total AOD3.30−0.0016Time [year]0.400.0027
20SO4 AOD2.98−0.0014Time [year]0.550.0002
Helsinki20SO4 AOD0.0310.0008SFFGAE [%]0.260.0211
Oslo12SO4 AOD0.120−6.4641 × 10−7GDP [EUR/capita]0.390.0292
Stockholm20Tot AOD0.0600.0020SFFGAE [%]0.340.0075
20SO4 AOD0.117−8.196 × 10−7GDP [EUR/capita]0.510.0004
Tallinn20SO4 AOD0.088−8.205 × 10−7GDP [EUR/capita]0.310.011
Vilnius19SO4 AOD0.118−1.3768 × 10−6GDP [EUR/capita]0.700.0000
Warsaw20Total AOD3.67−0.0017Time [year]0.580.0001
20SO4 AOD3.29−0.0016Time [year]0.670.0000
SFFGAE is at nomenclature of territorial units for statistics (NUTS) level 1 level; GDP is at NUTS3 level; Population is at NUTS3 level. Time span is for Oslo 2005– 2019, and 2001–2019 for Vilnius and Riga.

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Figure 1. Location of (a) the study area in Europe, and (b) the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin.
Figure 1. Location of (a) the study area in Europe, and (b) the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin.
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Figure 2. Population (a) and gross domestic product (GDP) (b) at nomenclature of territorial units for statistics (NUTS) 3 level, energy efficiency (c), and share of fossil fuels in gross available energy (d) at NUTS1 level in the Baltic Sea basin. This is our own elaboration based on data from EUROSTAT (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat, accessed on 22 January 2023).
Figure 2. Population (a) and gross domestic product (GDP) (b) at nomenclature of territorial units for statistics (NUTS) 3 level, energy efficiency (c), and share of fossil fuels in gross available energy (d) at NUTS1 level in the Baltic Sea basin. This is our own elaboration based on data from EUROSTAT (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat, accessed on 22 January 2023).
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Figure 3. Spatial distribution of emissions anomalies between 2019 and 1989–2018 of (a) SO2 from anthropogenic sources, (b) SO2 from biomass burning, and (c) SO4 from anthropogenic sources. Data drawn from the MERRA-2 emissions database for the study domain. Contour lines are in white colour.
Figure 3. Spatial distribution of emissions anomalies between 2019 and 1989–2018 of (a) SO2 from anthropogenic sources, (b) SO2 from biomass burning, and (c) SO4 from anthropogenic sources. Data drawn from the MERRA-2 emissions database for the study domain. Contour lines are in white colour.
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Figure 4. Spatial distribution of emissions anomalies of organic carbon (OC) between 2019 and 1989–2018 from (a) anthropogenic sources, (b) biomass burning, and (c) biogenic emissions. Data drawn from the MERRA-2 emissions database for the study domain. Contour lines are in white colour.
Figure 4. Spatial distribution of emissions anomalies of organic carbon (OC) between 2019 and 1989–2018 from (a) anthropogenic sources, (b) biomass burning, and (c) biogenic emissions. Data drawn from the MERRA-2 emissions database for the study domain. Contour lines are in white colour.
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Figure 5. Spatial distribution of emissions of black carbon (BC) anomalies between 2019 and 1989–2018 from (a) anthropogenic sources, and (b) biomass burning. Data drawn from the MERRA-2 emissions database for the study domain. Contour lines are in white colour.
Figure 5. Spatial distribution of emissions of black carbon (BC) anomalies between 2019 and 1989–2018 from (a) anthropogenic sources, and (b) biomass burning. Data drawn from the MERRA-2 emissions database for the study domain. Contour lines are in white colour.
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Figure 6. Spatial distribution of mean (a) total, SO4 (b), OC (c), BC (d), SS (e), and dust (f) AODs in the study domain from 1989 to 2019 based on MERRA-2 reanalysis.
Figure 6. Spatial distribution of mean (a) total, SO4 (b), OC (c), BC (d), SS (e), and dust (f) AODs in the study domain from 1989 to 2019 based on MERRA-2 reanalysis.
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Figure 7. Yearly mean total and SO4 aerosol optical depths (AODs) from MERRA-2 reanalysis, and total AOD derived from spaceborne MODIS and MISR observations over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019.
Figure 7. Yearly mean total and SO4 aerosol optical depths (AODs) from MERRA-2 reanalysis, and total AOD derived from spaceborne MODIS and MISR observations over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019.
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Figure 8. Yearly mean aerosol optical depth (AOD) of black carbon (BC), organic carbon (OC), sea salt (SS), and dust from MERRA-2 reanalysis over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019.
Figure 8. Yearly mean aerosol optical depth (AOD) of black carbon (BC), organic carbon (OC), sea salt (SS), and dust from MERRA-2 reanalysis over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019.
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Figure 9. Percentage contributions of the main aerosol species to total aerosol optical depth over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019. BC—black carbon; OC—organic carbon; SS—sea salt.
Figure 9. Percentage contributions of the main aerosol species to total aerosol optical depth over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019. BC—black carbon; OC—organic carbon; SS—sea salt.
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Figure 10. Percentage contributions of the main aerosol species of anthropogenic (i.e., sulphate, black carbon, and organic carbon) and natural (i.e., dust and sea salt) origins to total aerosol optical depth (AOD) for the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019. Data gap between 1991 and 1993 is due to the perturbation in the distribution of the main aerosol species following the eruption of Mount Pinatubo.
Figure 10. Percentage contributions of the main aerosol species of anthropogenic (i.e., sulphate, black carbon, and organic carbon) and natural (i.e., dust and sea salt) origins to total aerosol optical depth (AOD) for the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019. Data gap between 1991 and 1993 is due to the perturbation in the distribution of the main aerosol species following the eruption of Mount Pinatubo.
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Figure 11. MERRA-2 anthropogenic emissions from the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019.
Figure 11. MERRA-2 anthropogenic emissions from the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019.
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Figure 12. MERRA-2 anthropogenic emissions of black carbon (BC) and organic carbon (OC) from the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019.
Figure 12. MERRA-2 anthropogenic emissions of black carbon (BC) and organic carbon (OC) from the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin, namely (a) Berlin, (b) Copenhagen, (c) Helsinki, (d) Oslo, (e) Riga, (f) Stockholm, (g) Tallinn, (h) Vilnius, and (i) Warsaw from 1989 to 2019.
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Figure 13. Total and SO4 AODs plotted versus their respective predictive variables, namely (a,b) share of fossil fuel in gross available energy (SFFGAE), and (c) gross domestic product (GDP) per capita for Helsinki, Oslo, Stockholm, Tallinn, and Vilnius from 2000 to 2019. p < 0.05.
Figure 13. Total and SO4 AODs plotted versus their respective predictive variables, namely (a,b) share of fossil fuel in gross available energy (SFFGAE), and (c) gross domestic product (GDP) per capita for Helsinki, Oslo, Stockholm, Tallinn, and Vilnius from 2000 to 2019. p < 0.05.
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Table 2. Descriptive statistics of total aerosol optical depth (AOD) and AOD of the main aerosol species over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019.
Table 2. Descriptive statistics of total aerosol optical depth (AOD) and AOD of the main aerosol species over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019.
CityTotal AODSO4 AODBC AODOC AODDust AODSS AOD
Berlin0.191 ± 0.043
(0.149–0.330)
0.124 ± 0.046
(0.085–0.280)
0.010 ± 0.001
(0.008–0.012)
0.021 ± 0.004
(0.013–0.030)
0.021 ± 0.005
(0.013–0.033)
0.014 ± 0.002
(0.011–0.018)
Copenhagen0.174 ± 0.039
(0.135–0.303)
0.104 ± 0.042
(0.069–0.248)
0.008 ± 0.001
(0.006–0.010)
0.019 ± 0.004
(0.012–0.026)
0.018 ± 0.004
(0.011–0.026)
0.024 ± 0.003
(0.019–0.031)
Helsinki0.164 ± 0.048
(0.121–0.312)
0.098 ± 0.043
(0.060–0.252)
0.007 ± 0.001
(0.005–0.010)
0.024 ± 0.011
(0.012–0.063)
0.017 ± 0.004
(0.010–0.024)
0.018 ± 0.002
(0.014–0.023)
Oslo0.125 ± 0.034
(0.095–0.259)
0.076 ± 0.036
(0.049–0.222)
0.006 ± 0.001
(0.005–0.007)
0.018 ± 0.004
(0.011–0.026)
0.014 ± 0.003
(0.008–0.019)
0.011 ± 0.002
(0.008–0.014)
Riga0.174 ± 0.048
(0.132–0.318)
0.109 ± 0.046
(0.069–0.264)
0.008 ± 0.001
(0.005–0.011)
0.023 ± 0.008
(0.012–0.058)
0.020 ± 0.004
(0.011–0.029)
0.015 ± 0.003
(0.010–0.020)
Stockholm0.152 ± 0.039
(0.113–0.283)
0.092 ± 0.040
(0.054–0.236)
0.006 ± 0.001
(0.005–0.008)
0.019 ± 0.004
(0.012–0.027)
0.016 ± 0.003
(0.009–0.022)
0.019 ± 0.002
(0.014–0.022)
Tallinn0.159 ± 0.047
(0.117–0.306)
0.096 ± 0.044
(0.059–0.252)
0.007 ± 0.001
(0.005–0.009)
0.022 ± 0.008
(0.012–0.049)
0.018 ± 0.004
(0.010–0.025)
0.016 ± 0.002
(0.012–0.020)
Vilnius0.190 ± 0.049
(0.152–0.336)
0.125 ± 0.049
(0.084–0.285)
0.008 ± 0.001
(0.006–0.011)
0.024 ± 0.007
(0.013–0.044)
0.023 ± 0.005
(0.013–0.032)
0.010 ± 0.002
(0.007–0.014)
Warsaw0.216 ± 0.049
(0.169–0.354)
0.145 ± 0.051
(0.103–0.299)
0.011 ± 0.001
(0.008–0.014)
0.026 ± 0.005
(0.016–0.037)
0.025 ± 0.006
(0.014–0.037)
0.009 ± 0.001
(0.006–0.011)
Table 3. Contributions in percentage of the main aerosol species to total aerosol optical depth over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019.
Table 3. Contributions in percentage of the main aerosol species to total aerosol optical depth over the capitals of countries in the Baltic Sea basin from 1989 to 2019.
CitySO4 [%]BC [%]OC [%]Dust [%]SS [%]
Berlin63.8
(55.0–84.8)
5.7
(2.7–7.2)
11.5
(4.4–17.8)
11.7
(3.9–17.5)
7.4
(4.2–10.1)
Copenhagen58.2
(47.5–81.9)
5.0
(2.3–6.3)
11.6
(4.1–17.3)
10.9
(3.6–15.8)
14.3
(8.1–20.3)
Helsinki58.1
(48.4–80.7)
4.5
(2.3–5.6)
14.5
(7.1–26.8)
11.2
(3.2–16.5)
11.7
(6.6–18.1)
Oslo59.1
(48.8–85.8)
5.0
(2.1–6.4)
15.0
(4.7–22.7)
11.6
(3.3–16.2)
9.2
(4.1–13.1)
Riga60.6
(51.0–83.1)
4.5
(2.3–5.7)
13.8
(5.6–23.2)
12.1
(3.5–16.9)
9.0
(4.8–13.5)
Stockholm58.7
(48.0–83.5)
4.5
(2.1–5.7)
13.2
(4.7–19.0)
10.9
(3.2–15.0)
12.7
(6.5–17.0)
Tallinn58.9
(48.9–82.3)
4.5
(2.3–5.8)
14.3
(6.2–22.4)
11.8
(3.4–16.8)
10.5
(5.9–16.3)
Vilnius64.0
(53.7–84.9)
4.6
(2.3–5.9)
13.3
(5.3–20.5)
12.6
(3.9–18.1)
5.5
(2.9–8.5)
Warsaw65.8
(57.1–84.6)
5.4
(2.8–6.9)
12.4
(5.6–18.1)
12.1
(4.0–18.6)
4.2
(2.4–6.1)
Values are shown as mean (minimum–maximum).
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Mancinelli, E.; Passerini, G.; Virgili, S.; Rizza, U. Multi-Decadal Trends in Aerosol Optical Depth of the Main Aerosol Species Based on MERRA-2 Reanalysis: A Case Study in the Baltic Sea Basin. Remote Sens. 2024, 16, 2421. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16132421

AMA Style

Mancinelli E, Passerini G, Virgili S, Rizza U. Multi-Decadal Trends in Aerosol Optical Depth of the Main Aerosol Species Based on MERRA-2 Reanalysis: A Case Study in the Baltic Sea Basin. Remote Sensing. 2024; 16(13):2421. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16132421

Chicago/Turabian Style

Mancinelli, Enrico, Giorgio Passerini, Simone Virgili, and Umberto Rizza. 2024. "Multi-Decadal Trends in Aerosol Optical Depth of the Main Aerosol Species Based on MERRA-2 Reanalysis: A Case Study in the Baltic Sea Basin" Remote Sensing 16, no. 13: 2421. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16132421

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