4.7 Article

Ampli fied ozone pollution in cities during the COVID-19 lockdown

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 735, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.139542

Keywords

Air quality; Ozone; Coronavirus; Lockdown; Risk assessment

Funding

  1. INTERREG ALCOTRA project MITIMPACT
  2. Start-up Foundation for Introducing Talent of Nanjing University of Information Science AMP
  3. Technology (NUIST), Nanjing, China [003080, 002992]

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The effect of lockdown due to coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic on air pollution in four Southern European cities (Nice, Rome, Valencia and Turin) and Wuhan (China) was quantified, with a focus on ozone (O-3). Compared to the same period in 20172019, the daily O-3 mean concentrations increased at urban stations by 24% in Nice, 14% in Rome, 27% in Turin, 2.4% in Valencia and 36% in Wuhan during the lockdown in 2020. This increase in O-3 concentrations is mainly explained by an unprecedented reduction in NOx emissions leading to a lower O-3 titration by NO. Strong reductions in NO2 mean concentrations were observed in all European cities, similar to 53% at urban stations, comparable to Wuhan (57%), and similar to 65% at traffic stations. NO declined even further, similar to 63% at urban stations and similar to 78% at traffic stations in Europe. Reductions in PM2.5 and PM10 at urban stations were overall much smaller both in magnitude and relative change in Europe (similar to 8%) than in Wuhan (similar to 42%). The PM reductions due to limiting transportation and fuel combustion in institutional and commercial buildings were partly offset by increases of PM emissions from the activities at home in some of the cities. The NOx concentrations during the lockdown were on average 49% lower than those at weekends of the previous years in all cities. The lockdown effect on O-3 production was similar to 10% higher than the weekend effect in Southern Europe and 38% higher in Wuhan, while for PM the lockdown had the same effect as weekends in Southern Europe (similar to 6% of difference). This study highlights the challenge of reducing the formation of secondary pollutants such as O-3 even with strict measures to control primary pollutant emissions. These results are relevant for designing abatement policies of urban pollution.

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