scholarly journals Reviewer comment on MS of Tang et al., Drivers for spatial, temporal and long-term trends in atmospheric ammonia and ammonium in the UK.

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
László Horváth
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuk S. Tang ◽  
Christine F. Braban ◽  
Ulrike Dragosits ◽  
Anthony J. Dore ◽  
Ivan Simmons ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuk S. Tang ◽  
Christine F. Braban ◽  
Ulrike Dragosits ◽  
Anthony J. Dore ◽  
Ivan Simmons ◽  
...  

Abstract. A unique long-term dataset from the UK National Ammonia Monitoring Network (NAMN) is used here to assess spatial, seasonal and long-term variability in atmospheric ammonia (NH3: 1998–2014) and particulate ammonium (NH4+: 1999–2014) across the UK. Extensive spatial heterogeneity in NH3 concentrations is observed, with lowest annual mean concentrations at remote sites (


Author(s):  
Anand Menon ◽  
Luigi Scazzieri

This chapter examines the history of the United Kingdom’s relationship with the European integration process. The chapter dissects the long-term trends in public opinion and the more contingent, short-term factors that led to the referendum vote to leave the European Union. The UK was a late joiner and therefore unable to shape the early institutional development of the EEC. British political parties and public opinion were always ambiguous about membership and increasingly Eurosceptic from the early 1990s. Yet the UK had a significant impact on the EU’s development, in the development of the single market programme and eastward enlargement. If Brexit goes through, Britain will nevertheless maintain relations with the EU in all policy areas from agriculture to energy and foreign policy. Europeanization will remain a useful theoretical tool to analyse EU–UK relations even if the UK leaves the Union.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 705-733 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuk S. Tang ◽  
Christine F. Braban ◽  
Ulrike Dragosits ◽  
Anthony J. Dore ◽  
Ivan Simmons ◽  
...  

Abstract. A unique long-term dataset from the UK National Ammonia Monitoring Network (NAMN) is used here to assess spatial, seasonal and long-term variability in atmospheric ammonia (NH3: 1998–2014) and particulate ammonium (NH4+: 1999–2014) across the UK. Extensive spatial heterogeneity in NH3 concentrations is observed, with lowest annual mean concentrations at remote sites (< 0.2 µg m−3) and highest in the areas with intensive agriculture (up to 22 µg m−3), while NH4+ concentrations show less spatial variability (e.g. range of 0.14 to 1.8 µg m−3 annual mean in 2005). Temporally, NH3 concentrations are influenced by environmental conditions and local emission sources. In particular, peak NH3 concentrations are observed in summer at background sites (defined by 5 km grid average NH3 emissions < 1 kg N ha−1 yr−1) and in areas dominated by sheep farming, driven by increased volatilization of NH3 in warmer summer temperatures. In areas where cattle, pig and poultry farming is dominant, the largest NH3 concentrations are in spring and autumn, matching periods of manure application to fields. By contrast, peak concentrations of NH4+ aerosol occur in spring, associated with long-range transboundary sources. An estimated decrease in NH3 emissions by 16 % between 1998 and 2014 was reported by the UK National Atmospheric Emissions Inventory. Annually averaged NH3 data from NAMN sites operational over the same period (n =  59) show an indicative downward trend, although the reduction in NH3 concentrations is smaller and non-significant: Mann–Kendall (MK), −6.3 %; linear regression (LR), −3.1 %. In areas dominated by pig and poultry farming, a significant reduction in NH3 concentrations between 1998 and 2014 (MK: −22 %; LR: −21 %, annually averaged NH3) is consistent with, but not as large as the decrease in estimated NH3 emissions from this sector over the same period (−39 %). By contrast, in cattle-dominated areas there is a slight upward trend (non-significant) in NH3 concentrations (MK: +12 %; LR: +3.6 %, annually averaged NH3), despite the estimated decline in NH3 emissions from this sector since 1998 (−11 %). At background and sheep-dominated sites, NH3 concentrations increased over the monitoring period. These increases (non-significant) at background (MK: +17 %; LR: +13 %, annually averaged data) and sheep-dominated sites (MK: +15 %; LR: +19 %, annually averaged data) would be consistent with the concomitant reduction in SO2 emissions over the same period, leading to a longer atmospheric lifetime of NH3, thereby increasing NH3 concentrations in remote areas. The observations for NH3 concentrations not decreasing as fast as estimated emission trends are consistent with a larger downward trend in annual particulate NH4+ concentrations (1999–2014: MK: −47 %; LR: −49 %, p < 0.01, n =  23), associated with a lower formation of particulate NH4+ in the atmosphere from gas phase NH3.


Author(s):  
Pasi Ihalainen ◽  
Aleksi Sahala

This chapter explores a historical distant reading strategy of British Parliamentary discourse. It uses historical collocation analyses of ‘internationalism’ and the ‘international’ in the British Hansard Corpus and a selection of Commons and Lords debates concerning British membership in international organisations as it relates to the League of Nations, United Nations, Council of Europe, EEC and Brexit. The collocates that were deemed to be politically significant are grouped in 13 loose semantic fields. This macro-level analysis of long-term trends of discourse is supplemented with an analysis of the said key debates in their historical contexts, including comparisons between the two Houses, and with additional micro-level analyses of contextualised individual speeches in which politicians defined ‘internationalism’ by using the concepts in political action. This provides one general view on the historical evolvement of the discourse on internationalism over the past hundred years.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Parry ◽  
R. L. Wilby ◽  
C. Prudhomme ◽  
P. J. Wood

Abstract. Drought termination can be associated with dramatic transitions from drought to storms and flooding, and this is certainly true for recent events in the United Kingdom (UK). Attention devoted to these newsworthy and memorable events may be at the expense of drought terminations that proceed gradually and pose a different set of challenges for water resource managers. This paper defines drought termination as a phase of drought in its own right and makes the case for a more systematic approach to its identification and characterisation, applying an objective approach to detect drought terminations in observed river flow records for 52 catchments. The resulting archive of 459 drought terminations provides an unprecedented historical perspective on drought termination in the UK. Nationally- and regionally-coherent drought termination events are identifiable, although drought termination characteristics vary both between and within major episodes. Contrasting drought termination events in 1995--1998 and 2009--2012 are described in greater depth. The dataset is also used to assess potential linkages between metrics of drought termination characteristics and catchment properties. The duration of drought termination is moderately negatively correlated with elevation and catchment average rainfall, suggesting that wetter catchments in upland areas of the UK tend to experience shorter drought terminations. More urbanised catchments have a tendency for gradual drought terminations, contrary to perceptions of flashy hydrological response in these areas, although this may also be related to the type of catchments typical of lowland England. Potential linkages are found between both the duration and rate of drought termination and the duration of the preceding drought development phase, which may have important implications for water resources management during a drought. The dataset helps to place individual events within a long-term context. The drought termination phase in 2009--2012 was, at the time, regarded as exceptional in terms of magnitude and spatial footprint but the Thames river flow record reveals comparable events before 1930. Hence, the approach adopted and the chronologies of drought termination enable objective intercomparison of events. The dataset may in due course provide a basis for better understanding the drivers, long-term trends in occurrence and characteristics, and impacts of historical and contemporary drought termination events.


2006 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Gray

This paper explores how the UK Time Use Survey (UKTUS), together with the author's qualitative interviews and focus groups with London parents, can inform current policy debates about childcare and parental employment. It also refers to the international literature about long-term trends in parental childcare time. It addresses four key questions about time use and parenting, which have implications for theorisation of the ‘gender contract’ regarding childcare and for our understanding of the gendered distribution of time between care, work and leisure in two-parent families. How is total parenting time affected by parents’ work hours? How do the long work weeks of British fathers affect their capacity to share childcare with mothers? Would childcare time rise if work hours were more equally distributed between women and men? This invokes a discussion of how far childcare is really transferable between parents (or can be delegated to external carers); to what extent is it ‘work’ or a relational activity?


Author(s):  
Annalisa Cristini ◽  
Andrea Geraci ◽  
John Muellbauer

This chapter presents an analysis of changing job and pay structures in the UK, constructing for this purpose a novel dataset covering each year from 1975 to 2015 linking different datasets and ensuring that key variables such as occupation are captured on as consistent a basis as possible. This provides the information base required to investigate job polarization in a much more disaggregated fashion than previously possible, allowing important distinctions to be made by gender, sector, and region, between full- versus part-time workers, and across birth-cohorts. The analyses are thus able to reveal the differing implications of long-term trends in job structures and pay for these different groups, and bring out what the varying patterns reveal about the underlying processes at work in the labour market.


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