4.7 Article

Nitrogen dioxide reductions from satellite and surface observations during COVID-19 mitigation in Rome (Italy)

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 18, Pages 22981-23004

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-020-12141-9

Keywords

COVID-19; Rome; Air pollution; Nitrogen dioxide; TROPOMI; Reduction

Funding

  1. project SMURBS-SMart URBan Solutions for air quality, disasters, and city growth - European Commission [689443]

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A study in Italy evaluated air pollution changes in Rome and surrounding areas during the lockdown, showing significant reductions in NO2 levels, especially in urban areas. The research suggests that implementing lockdown measures resulted in an improvement in air quality, with NO2 declining sharply in both urban and rural sites.
Lockdown restrictions were implemented in Italy from 10 March 2020 to contain the COVID-19 pandemic. Our study aims to evaluate air pollution changes, with focus on nitrogen dioxide (NO2), before and during the lockdown in Rome and in the surroundings. Significant NO2 declines were observed during the COVID-19 pandemic with reductions of - 50%, - 34%, and - 20% at urban traffic, urban background, and rural background stations, respectively. Tropospheric NO2 vertical column density (VCD) from the TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) was used to evaluate the spatial-temporal variations of the NO2 before and during the lockdown for the entire area where the surface stations are located. The evaluation is concerned with the pixels including one or more air quality stations to explore the capability of the unprecedented high spatial resolution to monitor urban and rural sites from space with relation to the surface measurements. Good agreement between surface concentration and TROPOMI VCD was obtained in Rome (R = 0.64 in 2019, R = 0.77 in 2020) and in rural sites (R = 0.71 in 2019). Inversely, a slight correlation (R = 0.20) was observed in rural areas during the lockdown due to very low levels of NO2. Finally, the TROPOMI VCD showed a sharp decline in NO2, larger in urban (- 43%) than in rural sites (- 17%) as retrieved with the concurrent surface measurements averaging all the traffic and urban background (- 44%) and all the rural background stations (- 20%). These results suggest air pollution improvement in Rome gained from implementing lockdown restrictions.

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