Litcius/Paper detail

Record high solar irradiance in Western Europe during first COVID-19 lockdown largely due to unusual weather

Chiel C. van Heerwaarden, Wouter Mol, Menno Veerman, Imme Benedict, B.G. Heusinkveld, Wouter Knap, Stelios Kazadzis, Natalia Kouremeti, Stephanie Fiedler

2021Communications Earth & Environment58 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Spring 2020 broke sunshine duration records across Western Europe. The Netherlands recorded the highest surface irradiance since 1928, exceeding the previous extreme of 2011 by 13%, and the diffuse fraction of the irradiance measured a record low percentage (38%). The coinciding irradiance extreme and a reduction in anthropogenic pollution due to COVID-19 measures triggered the hypothesis that cleaner-than-usual air contributed to the record. Based on analyses of ground-based and satellite observations and experiments with a radiative transfer model, we estimate a 1.3% (2.3 W m −2 ) increase in surface irradiance with respect to the 2010–2019 mean due to a low median aerosol optical depth, and a 17.6% (30.7 W m −2 ) increase due to several exceptionally dry days and a very low cloud fraction overall. Our analyses show that the reduced aerosols and contrails due to the COVID-19 measures are far less important in the irradiance record than the dry and particularly cloud-free weather.

Topics & Concepts

IrradianceSolar irradianceEnvironmental scienceAtmospheric sciencesClimatologyAerosolCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Cloud fractionMeteorologyCloud coverGeographyCloud computingGeologyPhysicsMedicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)Computer scienceOperating systemDiseasePathologyQuantum mechanicsAtmospheric aerosols and cloudsCOVID-19 impact on air qualityClimate Change and Health Impacts