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Is Urban Air Quality a Problem?. Ian Longley. The air is cleaner than it was, isn’t it?. Effect of controls on coal burning. Health effects of NO 2 & PM 10. Reduction of 1 m g/m 3 in PM 10 could lead to gain in life expectancy of 0.5 weeks at cost of £1bn+ (IGCB Report to DETR, 2001) .
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Is Urban Air Quality a Problem? Ian Longley
Health effects of NO2 & PM10 • Reduction of 1 mg/m3 in PM10 could lead to gain in life expectancy of 0.5 weeks at cost of £1bn+ (IGCB Report to DETR, 2001) . • Saving to NHS order or £1m p.a.
National Air Quality StrategyObjectives (UK) Exceedences allow for unfavourable meteorology
The current state of UK Air Quality Major determinant of air pollution concentrations is the wind
National / international emission abatement strategies: Engines
(Inter)national strategies: Petrol/Diesel • ULSP/ULSD (<50ppm) available from 2000, all fuel by 2005 • EU consulting on 10ppm S limit • Low Benzene Petrol (also ULSP) • City Diesel (7ppm S, 30% less PM, up to 88% for buses with particle trap)
(Inter)national strategies: Alternative Fuels: Chemical • LPG – 25000 on the road in UK (including hybrids), 80% less PM for buses • CNG – UK has 20 filling stations, 50-90% less PM • 140 CNG buses operating in France • Biodiesel • Best options for LDVs in next 10-20 years
(Inter)national strategies: Alternative Fuels - Others • Hybrid – petrol/electric: • Toyota Prius & Honda Insight • Electric – Peugeot 106, Bristol park & ride buses, Cambridge solar bus • Fuel cells (from 2010? London trial buses in 2003)
Local Air Quality Management • Environment Act 1995: Local Authority duty • Create Emission Inventories • Dispersion modelling to predict concentrations NOW and in 2005 • Identify areas where 2005 objectives will NOT be met.
Air Quality Management Areas, e.g. Greater Manchester • AQMA declared where 2005 objective for NO2 will NOT be met.
AQMAs • 3 million live within AQMAs, mostly in Greater London. • RESULT: most L.A.s report most Objectives WILL be met, EXCEPT NO2 and PM10 in urban areas and near major roads. • L.A.s must draw up Action Plans for AQMAs.
Action Plan options 1: restrictions • Low Emission Zone (e.g. central London predicted 16% reduction in NOx, 25% PM10 emissions), also Nottingham, Leicester, York, Bath • Council vehicle fleets • Congestion charging (London, Durham, Bristol, Edinburgh, Manchester) • Partial or total road closure • Bus/cycle/HGV/high-occupancy lanes • Parking controls/changes
Action Plan options 2 • Traffic calming • Traffic management (signalling, bollards) • Changing speed limits • Smooth driving styles • Rail and light-rail investment • Bus and park-and-ride investment • Public information and ‘encouragement’
Review & Assessment • Monitoring: modelling compared to measurements • Models consistently under-predict for NO2 and PM10 in urban areas, especially densely-built-up areas. • Models perform badly at predicting PM10.
The problem with PM10 • Fine mode (nm) mostly carbonaceous from exhausts. Main suspect in adverse health effects. • Coarse mode (mm) often crustal. Concentrations related to wind speed and direction. Much harder to control. • Mass measurements (PM10 ) dominated by coarse mode.
Urban hot-spots • Personal exposure study showed half of exposure of PM2.5 occurred over 15% of time, mostly when travelling (Rea et al, Jl. Air & Waste Manage. Assoc. vol.51, Sep 2001) • Epidemiological studies based on monitoring sites – R&A shows under-estimate exposure (Alm et al, Atmos. Env. Vol.35, 2001) • How far into surroundings does a hot-spot’s effects penetrate?
Street Canyon Aerosol Research - SCAR Particle concentrations and fluxes are dependent upon • Wind speed, • Wind direction and canyon assymetry, • Emission strength, • Surface heat emission, • Traffic-modified mean winds, • Traffic-induced turbulence (especially in low winds), • Particle size
Conclusions • Urban air quality improved in 1960s, but traffic growth compromised improvements. • Technological fixes to engines and fuels delivered big improvements and will do so for next 10 – 20 years, but diminishing returns. • Suburban and urban background air pollution is marginal – susceptible populations. • Urban hot-spots probably require further measures which may restrict mobility. • More research needed (by Atmos Physics post-docs).
But… • Of 2.9 billion living in cities around the world 2 billion in ‘less developed’ regions (UN,1999); majority of worst polluted cities in Asia • Vehicle emission control technology is expensive • Cooking and small fires major sources • Many cities are less windy than UK cities • Many cities in arid/semi-arid areas – affected by natural dusts • 2-5% of all deaths in urban areas caused by air pollution. • Demand for transport growing much faster than ever happened in Europe.