4.8 Article

Two-stroke scooters are a dominant source of air pollution in many cities

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 5, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms4749

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss Federal Office for the Environment (FOEN)
  2. Federal Roads Office (FEDRO)
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation [Ambizione PZ00P2_131673, SAPMAV 200021_13016]
  4. EU commission [290605]
  5. UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
  6. French Environment and Energy Management Agency (ADEME) [1162C00O2]
  7. Velux Stiftung [593]

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Fossil fuel-powered vehicles emit significant particulate matter, for example, black carbon and primary organic aerosol, and produce secondary organic aerosol. Here we quantify secondary organic aerosol production from two-stroke scooters. Cars and trucks, particularly diesel vehicles, are thought to be the main vehicular pollution sources. This needs re-thinking, as we show that elevated particulate matter levels can be a consequence of 'asymmetric pollution' from two-stroke scooters, vehicles that constitute a small fraction of the fleet, but can dominate urban vehicular pollution through organic aerosol and aromatic emission factors up to thousands of times higher than from other vehicle classes. Further, we demonstrate that oxidation processes producing secondary organic aerosol from vehicle exhaust also form potentially toxic 'reactive oxygen species'.

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