Abstract
It is important to understand connections between society and the
natural environment for anticipating environmental hazards and
anthropogenic effects on the broader Earth system. In this study, we
conduct a detailed exploration of the interactions between oceanic
thunderstorms and maritime traffic. Shipping traffic produces aerosols
that perturb the otherwise “clean” ocean environment. Prior work
proposed these aerosol effects as the cause of increased lightning
activity over certain shipping lanes. However, introducing tall
well-grounded objects into a high electric field environment might also
facilitate lightning discharges, as we see with upward lightning over
land. We consider both possibilities in this work.
Our analyses of the thunderstorms responsible for the enhanced lightning
activity over the shipping lane with the clearest anthropogenic signal
indicate that the anthropogenic signature results from an increased
frequency of lightning-producing storms. We did not find evidence of
variations in the microphysical parameters describing the storms over
shipping lanes and other nearby oceanic regions that might suggest
aerosol effects. In contrast, matching lightning stroke data with ship
transponder events in oceanic regions where public data are available
reveals a strong signal from direct ship interactions with lightning
that results in a 1-2 orders of magnitude increase in stroke frequency
at current ship locations compared to other nearby regions. These
results highlight the central role of direct ship interactions in
explaining lightning enhancements over shipping lanes.
We also document the frequency of these direct lightning interactions
across various categories of vessels and on individual ships present in
the public data.