4.7 Article

Open waste burning causes fast and sharp changes in particulate concentrations in peripheral neighborhoods

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 765, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142736

Keywords

Air pollution; Solid waste management; Waste collection; Public opinion survey; Short-lived climate pollutants; Dump site fire

Funding

  1. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development of Brazil (CNPq) [404146/2013-9, 400273/2014-4]
  2. Coordinating Agency for Advanced Training of Graduate Personnel (CAPES)
  3. CNPq

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The study found that open burning of municipal solid waste can deteriorate air quality, with varying levels of PM2.5 and BC concentrations in different areas. Residents in the neighborhood reported higher PM2.5 concentrations but lower BC/PM2.5 ratios compared to downtown, and identified poor waste management practices such as waste burning and illegal dump sites. Suggestions to combat this issue include raising public awareness, adopting education initiatives, and enforcing regular inspection of burning events by authorities.
The open burning of municipal solidwaste (MSW) -frequently observed in developing countries- emits harmful pollutants, including fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and black carbon (BC), and deteriorates the air quality in urban areas. This work reports on PM2.5 and BC measurements (fixed and mobile) conducted in a residential neighborhood on the outskirts of a Brazilian city (Londrina), complemented by a public opinion survey to understand the open burning in the context of waste management. Mean (+/- standard deviation) BC concentration (1.48 +/- 1.40 mu g m(-3)) at the fixed sites of the neighborhood was lower than downtown, while PM2.5 (9.68 +/- 8.40 mu g m(-3)) concentration was higher. The mobile monitoring showed higher mean PM2.5 concentrations but lower BC/PM2.5 ratios than downtown, with sharp and fast spikes (up to 317.87 and 565.21 mu g m(-3) for BC and PM2.5, respectively). The large spatial heterogeneity of particulate concentrations was associated with the occurrence of MSW burning events. Our observations were verified by the survey respondents who identified poor waste management practices: garbage in streets, waste burning, and illegal dump sites. Even though the area has a municipal waste collection service, the majority of the respondents (87%) had seen waste burning close to their homes on a weekly basis, and think that people burn waste out of habit (54%) and because they are not patient to wait for the collection services (67%). To combat this illegal practice, we suggest raising the public awareness through campaigns at local level, adopting education initiatives and economic incentives for correct waste segregation, and enforcing regular inspection of burning events by the authorities. Our research method proved to be a time- and cost-effective approach for mapping particulate concentrations and for identifying undesirable waste practices, and could be effectively applied to other global cities. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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