4.7 Article

Historical dry deposition of air pollution in the urban background in Oslo, Norway, compared to Western European data

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT
Volume 267, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2021.118777

Keywords

Air pollution; Historical emissions; Dry deposition; Oslo; Buildings; Kuznets curve

Funding

  1. Norwegian Institute of Air Research

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The dry deposition of major air pollutants in the urban background in Oslo, Norway, from 1835 to 2020 shows varying trends, with PM2.5 dominating the deposition and SO2 levels decreasing by around 1990. NOx deposition peaked in the 1960s and had an impact on the environmental Kuznets curves.
The historical (1835-2020) dry deposition of major air pollutants (SO2, NOx, O-3 and PM2.5) in the urban background in Oslo, Norway, in a situation that could represent the building facades, was approximated from reported fuel combustion, emission factors, air concentrations since 1960, and dry deposition velocities. The annual accumulated dry deposition (and thus not considering the removal processes) of the pollutants, together, was found to have varied from about 2.3 to 27 g m(-2), with the maximum in the 1960s caused by high SO2 emissions from the combustion of fuel oils, and with 1.6 kg m(-2) having deposited over all the years. The deposition of PM2.5 was found to have dominated from 1835, have increased to a maximum in 1875 and then slowly decreased. The SO2 deposition decreased to a low value around 1990. The NOx deposition was also at its highest in the 1960s to about 1970, it became the largest from the 1980s, and then showed a clear decrease from about 2010. The O-3 deposition was lower in the years of the maximum total and NOx deposition. The dry deposition of O-3 and NOx were found to be about similar in 2020, more than two times that of PM2.5 and more than four times that of SO2. The trends of the NOx emissions were found to reflect the relative (1975) and absolute (similar to 2000) turning points of the environmental Kuznets curves (EKC) that has been suggested for Norway, whereas the trend of the SO2 emissions seems to have shortcut this development by the strong regulations in the emissions from 1970 that lead to near simultaneous relative and absolute reductions. The gradual decrease of the PM2.5 emissions from about 1945 seems to correspond with the decrease in combustion energy intensity in the economy as wood was substituted with more energy efficient fuels and then with the continued reduction in the wood burning.

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