4.7 Article

Understanding seasonal variation in ambient air quality and its relationship with crop residue burning activities in an agrarian state of India

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 3, Pages 4145-4158

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-15631-6

Keywords

PM2 5; Agricultural residue burning; Industrial emissions; Seasonal variations; IGP; Fire counts

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The study conducted a seasonal variation analysis of ambient air quality in 21 districts of the Haryana state, located in the Indo-Gangetic Plains of India. The results showed that all zones had higher concentrations of particulate matter than the national standards, with the post-monsoon season being the most severe. Winters were primarily influenced by crop residue burning.
In India, Indo-Gangetic Plains (IGP) is becoming the hotspot of air pollution due to increasing anthropogenic activities such as rapid industrial growth, infrastructure development, transportation activities, and seasonal practice of crop residue burning. In the current study, seasonal variation in ambient air quality for 14 parameters, i.e., particulate matter (PM), trace gases, and volatile organic compounds (VOCs), along with meteorological parameters, was studied in 21 districts of the Haryana state for year 2019, situated in IGP. To analyze spatial variation of pollutants, ambient air quality data of 23 continuous ambient air quality monitoring stations were divided into three zones based on ecology and cropping pattern. All the zones showed annual mean PM10 and PM2.5 concentrations much higher than national ambient air quality standards. Annual mean PM10 concentration (+/- standard deviation) in Zones-1, 2, and 3 was 156 +/- 86, 174 +/- 93, and 143 +/- 74 mu g m(-3), whereas for PM2.5 was 71 +/- 44, 85 +/- 54, and 78 +/- 47 mu g m(-3). The results showed a considerable seasonal variation in the concentration of all pollutants. Most of the pollutants peak in the post-monsoon season, followed by winters in which crop residue burning predominates in many parts of the Haryana. PM10 concentrations increased by 65-112% and PM2.5 concentrations increased by 131-147% in the post-monsoon season compared to monsoons. The post-monsoon season showed the highest concentration of PM10, NO, and toluene (Zone-1); and PM2.5, NH3, CO, and benzene (Zone-2); whereas in winters, SO2 (Zone-1); ethylbenzene, m,p-xylene, and xylene (Zone-2); and NO2 and NOx (Zone-3) showed the maximum pollution levels. The O-3 concentration was highest in the pre-monsoon season (Zone-1). The satellite-based fire counts and PCA results show a significant influence of crop residue burning in the post-monsoon season and solid biomass burning in winters on Haryana's air quality. The study could help to understand seasonal variation in ambient air quality and the influence of factors such as crop residue burning in the IGP region, which could help to formulate season-specific control measures to improve regional air quality.

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