4.8 Article

Monthly Global Estimates of Fine Particulate Matter and Their Uncertainty

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 22, Pages 15287-15300

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c05309

Keywords

fine particulate matter; aerosol optical depth; chemical transport model; satellite; air pollution

Funding

  1. Canadian Urban Environmental Health Research Consortium
  2. Natural Science and Engineering Council of Canada [RGPIN-2019-04670]
  3. Washington University
  4. NASA Applied Sciences Program [80NSSC21K0508]
  5. John D. and Catherine T. MacAuthor Foundation

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This study developed a methodology for monthly PM2.5 estimates and uncertainties using satellite retrievals, chemical transport modeling, and ground-based measurements. Findings show higher winter PM2.5 concentrations in many densely populated regions, with South Asia and East Asia having particularly high levels, although East Asia showed a decreasing trend in PM2.5 concentrations over the period studied.
Annual global satellite-based estimates of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) are widely relied upon for air-quality assessment. Here, we develop and apply a methodology for monthly estimates and uncertainties during the period 1998-2019, which combines satellite retrievals of aerosol optical depth, chemical transport modeling, and ground-based measurements to allow for the characterization of seasonal and episodic exposure, as well as aid air-quality management. Many densely populated regions have their highest PM2.5 concentrations in winter, exceeding summertime concentrations by factors of 1.5-3.0 over Eastern Europe, Western Europe, South Asia, and East Asia. In South Asia, in January, regional population-weighted monthly mean PM2.5 concentrations exceed 90 mu g/m(3), with local concentrations of approximately 200 mu g/m3 for parts of the Indo-Gangetic Plain. In East Asia, monthly mean PM2.5 concentrations have decreased over the period 2010-2019 by 1.6-2.6 mu g/m(3)/year, with decreases beginning 2-3 years earlier in summer than in winter. We find evidence that global-monitored locations tend to be in cleaner regions than global mean PM2.5 exposure, with large measurement gaps in the Global South. Uncertainty estimates exhibit regional consistency with observed differences between ground-based and satellite-derived PM2.5. The evaluation of uncertainty for agglomerated values indicates that hybrid PM2.5 estimates provide precise regional-scale representation, with residual uncertainty inversely proportional to the sample size.

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