4.5 Article

Twenty-five years of nationwide ambient metals measurement in the United Kingdom: concentration levels and trends

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT
Volume 142, Issue 1-3, Pages 127-140

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-007-9914-9

Keywords

air quality monitoring networks; ambient air; ambient concentrations; heavy metals; historical data; trend analysis

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Ambient air quality has been an important issue for humans and the environment for hundreds of years. More recently, definitive links have been identified between pollutants and adverse effects on human health and on environmental sustainability. Of particular concern since the last quarter of the twentieth century has been the presence of toxic 'heavy metals' in ambient air. In order to measure the concentrations of pollutants, including 'heavy metals', in ambient air, to assess human and environmental exposure, comply with developing legislation, and assess newly introduced abatement strategies, the UK government established nationwide air quality measurement networks in the late 1970s. The nationwide measurement of 'heavy metals' in ambient air began in the late 1970s, and in 1980 was developed into several national networks, aimed at different metals and different emissions sources. These networks were rationalised into the current UK Heavy Metals Monitoring Network in 2003. The data produced by the current scientific operator of the Network, the National Physical Laboratory (NPL), in 2005, marked 25 years of ambient 'heavy metals' measurement in the UK at a nationwide level. This paper celebrates this milestone and provides a novel and critical examination of Network operations, measured concentration levels, and trends, over the last quarter of a century.

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