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Abatement programs in urban areas and their interlinkage to European strategies. Martin Lutz. Senate Department for Urban Development Berlin. situation sources solutions challenges Issues for discussion. Considering urban air areas in a European LRTAP strategy why ?.
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Abatement programs in urban areas and theirinterlinkage to European strategies Martin Lutz Senate Department for Urban Development Berlin • situation • sources • solutions • challenges • Issues for discussion
Considering urban air areas in a European LRTAP strategy why ? • Aim is peoples’ health – most people live in urban areas (e.g. in Sweden 7.5 of 9 Mio) • large-scale pollution background contributes also to exposure of urban population • more than half of premature mortality in Swedish cities due to regional PM background • Emissions of urban areas contribute to large-scalebackground and large-scale effects • Emissions density is high in urban areas • implementation of any strategy is to focus on urban areas • cities are “binding grids”
Current situation example Paris 2003 Annual mean NO2 levels Limit Value: 40g/m3 RoadsideUrbanSuburbanRural Margin of Tolerance, 2003: 53g/m3 Source: D. Gombert, AIRPARIF
Current situation example Germany 2003 PM10 NO2 limit value limit value Source: A. Graff, UBA
PM10 Rural Background Current situation example Regione Lombardia 2003 Milan – 2003 – “via Messina” (urban background station – city centre – gravimetric method) Source: C. M. Marino, ARPA, 2004
Current situation interim conclusion • Many cities within the EU will have trouble meeting the EU Limit Values • Mainly PM10 an NO2 • Benzene still a problem in southern Europe • EU in 2001: PM10 Limit Values exceeded 34% of >700 sites, and in 180 cities with 20 Mio inhabitants • eg. 70 - 120 urban areas in Germany expect to exceed 2005 PM10 Limit Values • Survey among EU cities by Stockholm: 16 of 25 cities anticipate problems with PM and NO2
40 35 30 25 20 15 regional background 10 hemisspheric/natural background urban background Source analysis Simplified schematic of the PM pollution Urban areas countryside Traffic, local sources PM [µg/m³]
Attributing PM10 sources Sectors contributing to total PM10 at a busy traffic spot in Berlin.... #based on values recorded at the top of a radio tower 324m above ground Institut für Energie- und Umwelttechnik e.V. new data of 2002
source analysis interim conclusion • Motor traffic is the predominantsource of PM pollution in many cities; can be different in industrialized areas • also 20% of regional PM10 background can be attributed to traffic exhaust emissions, but the bulk is secondary PM from industry&cumbustion • more than half of traffic related PM10 stems from road&tire abrasion and resuspension of road dust • regional PM10 background is between 30-60% of kerbside levels • HDV & LDV emissions of particular importance • NO2regional background usually less than 20 %
Likely trend of regional PM10 & urban NO2 background impact of a CurrentLEgislation- scenario in & around Berlin by 2010: we might get~ 20% reduction of urbanNO2but we need > 25% by 2010: we might get < 15% reduction of regional PM,but we need~ 20% by 2005 Source: Stern, et al., 2004
CLE/Baseline scenario interim conclusion Expected improvement of PM10 and NO2 pollution insufficient Further action needed
Action being taken by cities transport sector (i) • control of vehicle emissions through technical means and cleaner fuels Cleaning municipal vehicle fleets (e.g. Regione Lombardia: 2000 new LPG/CNG buses) Financial incentives for clean vehicles • funding schemes for new clean vehicle technology and fuels ( e.g. CNG program for taxis, van, lorries in Berlin) • Emission related City toll (Stockholm) or parking fees (who ?) Regulatory measures • Smog regulations with ban of polluting vehicles(e.g. Regione Lombardia, Paris) • Effect fairly limited on PM peaks and NO2 annual mean • even in Milano average reduction of PM hourly values only 5% • rising share of regional background PM during episodes (Berlin>70%) • Low Emission Zones ( Rome, SW cities, London, Greenwich) • London: lorries, buses taxes need EURO II & CRT: expected additional 9% PM-Emission-reduction in 2007 • Licensing arrangement for public transport services (buses, taxes)
sulphate nitrate Berlin Enhanced large-scale PM transport during episodes little effect of local short term measures Spatial distribution of potential source areas of secondary PM-10 imported into the Greater Berlin area Source: one year backward trajectory statistics byE. Reimer, 2004
Enhanced large-scale PM transport during episodes little effect of local short term measures sources of polluted air in Illmitz (backward trajectories statistics), elevated levels in red Source: C. Nagl, UBA Vienna, 2004
Action being taken by cities transport sector (i) • control of vehicle emissions through technical means and cleaner fuels Cleaning municipal vehicle fleets (e.g. Regione Lombardia: 2000 new LPG/CNG buses) Financial incentives for clean vehicles • funding schemes for new clean vehicle technology and fuels ( e.g. CNG program for taxis, van, lorries in Berlin) • Emission related City toll (Stockholm) or parking fees (who ?) Regulatory measures • Smog regulations with ban of polluting vehicles(e.g. Regione Lombardia, Paris) • Effect fairly limited on PM peaks and NO2 annual mean • even in Milano average reduction of PM hourly values only 5% • rising share of regional background PM during episodes (Berlin>70%) • Low Emission Zones ( Rome, SW cities, London, Greenwich) • London: lorries, buses taxes need EURO II & CRT: expected additional 9% PM-Emission-reduction in 2007 • Licensing arrangement for public transport services (buses, taxes)
Action being taken by cities transport sector (i) • control of vehicle emissions through technical means and cleaner fuels Cleaning municipal vehicle fleets (e.g. Regione Lombardia: 2000 new LPG/CNG buses) Financial incentives for clean vehicles • funding schemes for new clean vehicle technology and fuels ( e.g. CNG program for taxis, van, lorries in Berlin) • Emission related City toll (Stockholm) or parking fees (who ?) Regulatory measures • Smog regulations with ban of polluting vehicles (e.g. Regione Lombardia, Paris) • Effect fairly limited on PM peaks and NO2 annual mean • even in Milano average reduction of PM hourly values only 5% • rising share of regional background PM during episodes (Berlin>70%) • Low Emission Zones ( Rome, SW cities, London, Greenwich) • London: lorries, buses taxes need EURO II & CRT: expected additional 9% PM-Emission-reduction in 2007 • Licensing arrangement for public transport services (buses, taxes)
Action being taken by cities transport sector (ii) • contain road traffic volume (growth) • Congestion charging (e.g. London): • Effect: 12% less NOx und PM10 emissions • Extension planned • Parking fees (e.g. Berlin), park & ride • sustainable transport- and urban planning • Investment in cleaner transport modes (public transport & cycling) • Berlin: 10 bn € last decade • still low car density (340 cars/1000 people) • < 40% share of car traffic • London: 10 bn £ next 5 years • Regione Lombardia: 6 bn € next 12 years • Bus lanes, priority at traffic signals for buses & trams • Restrict parking capacities in new buildings needs long time to take effect
Action being taken by cities transport sector (iii) • Optimised traffic management • re-routeing through traffic in city centres on tangential roads effect in large cities: ~ 10% reduction in Berlin’s centre • rerouting HDV traffic in sensitive areas (Prague) Field test in Berlin: -7% PM10, -20% NOx pollution • bypass roads to calm traffic in sensitive areas • No net reduction of emissions • Better road maintenance to reduce abrasion • Ban/charging use of studded tyres (Scandinavia) • Speed limits • big effect on noise • little effect on air quality
Action being taken by cities other sectors • Large installations: BAT, local controls on industry • House heating/small combustion • BAT for burners • Fuel switch (Gas, ban of ‘dirty’ fuels) • Structural changes (heat&power co-generation, district heating) Berlin: ~ 10% further reduction of PPM-emissions • Promoting use of renewables (e.g. Lombardia, Berlin) • Building sites (off-road vehicles Zürich) • Public information and education
Action being taken by cities Challenges (i) • Declineofregional PM background too slow • Local efforts cannot compensate • Vehicle emission standardslag behind progress in control technology and in relation to ambition of PM and NO2- limit values we could achieve more emission reduction earlier • Little/no progress in NO2 - reduction • Shift to diesel cars and vans • Shift towards higher NO2/NOx emission ratio & rising oxidation capacity of the urban atmosphere • Drop of real word emissions lag behind expectations (“test cycle beat”) • Non-exhaust PM emissions significant and largely depending on traffic volume
Action being taken by cities Challenges (i) • Decline of regional PM background too slow • Local efforts cannot compensate • Vehicle emission standardslag behind progress in control technology and in relation to ambition of PM and NO2- limit values we could achieve more emission reduction earlier • Little/no progress in NO2 - reduction • Shift to diesel cars and vans • Shift towards higher NO2/NOx emission ratio & rising oxidation capacity of the urban atmosphere • Drop of real word emissions lag behind expectations (“test cycle beat”) • Non-exhaust PM emissions significant and largely depending on traffic volume
PM Emission Standards for HDV Engines in g/kWh Source: Stefan Rodt, UBA Berlin, 2003
NOx Emission Standards for HDV Engines in g/kWh Source: Stefan Rodt, UBA Berlin, 2003
Action being taken by cities Challenges (i) • Decline of regional PM background too slow • Local efforts cannot compensate • Vehicle emission standardslag behind progress in control technology and in relation to ambition of PM and NO2- limit values we could achieve more emission reduction earlier • Little/no progress in NO2 - reduction • Shift to diesel cars and vans • Shift towards higher NO2/NOx emission ratio & rising oxidation capacity of the urban atmosphere • Drop of real word emissions lag behind expectations (“test cycle beat”)
700,000 600,000 New Calculation 2003 500,000 400,000 300,000 Earlier Calculation 200,000 According to HBEFA 1.2 According to HBEFA 2.0 (provisional) 100,000 0 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Year Higher HDV NOx-emissions in Germany NOx Emissions from HDV in Germany According to HBEFA 1.2 and HBEFA 2.0
Action being taken by cities Challenges (ii) • Non-exhaust PM emissions significant and largely depending on traffic volume • Lacking “integration” in EU transport&funding policy • bias of investment into road infrastructure • EU funds still award excessive built up of road capacities • Unsustainable growth in freight transport and car motorisation
Local and European/national action on transport examples for interdependencies Even pure local action needs EU support
One strategy for all scales issues arising from an urban perspective(i) for policy …. • in framing external factors, like (road) traffic volumes and energy efficiency • stronger coordination with goals of other policy areas, like climate change, noise, road safety, energy • In reviewing (sectoral) emission control objectives, e.g. vehicle emission standards, NECs • ambitious enough to ensure compliance with ENV objectives especially in urban areas • in setting/reviewingair quality objectives • make sure, they can be achieved also in urban areas by cost-effective control measures Cities are the binding grids in terms of exposure
One strategy for all scales issues arising from an urban perspective(ii) for policy … • in setting/reviewing of environmental objectives • Certaintyon the future type of PM objectives important • Taking account of coarse fraction steers local action against non-exhaust emissions • Focus on carbonaceous compounds would drive progress on European emissions standards andlocal action • Switch to smaller fractions puts more weight on European vehicle standards and European action against secondary PM • 24h PM standard puts burden on local short-term actions, which conflicts with their limited impact • legally binding AQ standards desirable ? • in order to drive progress in emission control technology and regulations • In order to facilitate implementation of local measures
One strategy for all scales issues arising from an urban perspective(iii) for policy … • in setting/reviewing of environmental objectives • require compliance also at hot spots ? • for equality reasons so as to protect poor people too • would drive progress in emission control technology and regulations, which generates benefits everywhere • how to deal which large differences in exposure between and within cities, but make progress everywhere, unless AQ is below no-effect levels ? • gap-closure objective, i.e. percentage improvement ? • plus limit/target value for the worst areas ? • how to deal with unforeseen difficulties • flexibility in attainment period, like for benzene ? Keep format of objectives in AQ legislation simple
‘Current’ Level in each zone/grid cell Equal percentage Interim level achieved by of reduction implementing the NECs (gap-closure) -X% everywhere -X% -X% -X% Target Value -X% -X% Additional improvement in hot spot areas Long-term Environmental Objective (~WHO- guideline) Cross section through EU Definition of environmental objectives used in the daughter directive and as basis for the NECs Ozone level
One strategy for all scales issues arising from an urban perspective(iv) for science…. • tools and approach for strategy development to cover the urban scale • as a minimum: dispersion models, emissions • what about IAM, costs of local measures ? • progress on the uncertainty of PM health impacts sufficient fuel for discussions ….. Nu kör vi !