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Temporally-resolved sectoral and regional contributions to air pollution in Beijing: informing short-term emission controls

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Temporally-resolved sectoral and regional contributions to air pollution in Beijing: informing short-term emission controls. / Ansari, T. U.; Wild, O.; Ryan, E. et al.
In: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions, Vol. 21, No. 6, 23.03.2021, p. 4471-4485.

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Ansari TU, Wild O, Ryan E, Chen Y, Li J, Wang Z. Temporally-resolved sectoral and regional contributions to air pollution in Beijing: informing short-term emission controls. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions. 2021 Mar 23;21(6):4471-4485. doi: 10.5194/acp-21-4471-2021

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@article{e3b4243d60f74a43945e26af101c0966,
title = "Temporally-resolved sectoral and regional contributions to air pollution in Beijing: informing short-term emission controls",
abstract = "We investigate the contributions of local and regional emission sources to air quality in Beijing to inform the design of short-term emission control strategies for mitigating major pollution episodes. We use a well-evaluated version of the WRF-Chem model at 3 km horizontal resolution to determine the daily accumulation of pollution over Beijing from local and regional sources in October 2014 under a range of meteorological conditions. Considering feasible emission reductions across residential, transport, power and industrial sectors, we find that one-day controls on local emissions have an immediate effect on PM2.5 concentrations on the same day, but can have lingering effects as much as five days later under stagnant conditions. One-day controls in surrounding provinces have the greatest effect in Beijing on the day following the controls, but may have negligible effects under northwesterly winds when local emissions dominate. To explore the contribution of different emission sectors and regions, we perform simulations with each source removed in turn. We find that residential and industrial sectors from neighbouring provinces dominate PM2.5 levels in Beijing during major pollution episodes, but that local residential emissions and industrial/residential emissions from more distant provinces can also contribute significantly during some episodes. We then perform a structured set of perturbed emission simulations to allow us to build statistical emulators that represent the relationships between emission sources and air pollution in Beijing over the period. We use these computationally fast emulators to determine the sensitivity of PM2.5 concentrations to different emission sources and the interactions between them, including for secondary PM, and to create pollutant response surfaces for daily average PM2.5 concentrations in Beijing. We use these surfaces to identify the short-term emission controls needed to meet the national air quality target of daily average PM2.5 less than 75 μg m−3 for pollution episodes of different intensities. We find that for heavily polluted days with daily mean PM2.5 higher than 225 μg m−3, even emission reductions of 90 % across all sectors over Beijing and surrounding provinces may be insufficient to meet the national air quality standards. These results highlight the regional nature of PM pollution and the challenges of tackling it during major pollution episodes.",
keywords = "Air quality, PM2.5, Beijing, Source attribution, Emulation, Emission control",
author = "Ansari, {T. U.} and O. Wild and E. Ryan and Y. Chen and J. Li and Z. Wang",
year = "2021",
month = mar,
day = "23",
doi = "10.5194/acp-21-4471-2021",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "4471--4485",
journal = "Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions",
issn = "1680-7367",
publisher = "Copernicus GmbH",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Temporally-resolved sectoral and regional contributions to air pollution in Beijing

T2 - informing short-term emission controls

AU - Ansari, T. U.

AU - Wild, O.

AU - Ryan, E.

AU - Chen, Y.

AU - Li, J.

AU - Wang, Z.

PY - 2021/3/23

Y1 - 2021/3/23

N2 - We investigate the contributions of local and regional emission sources to air quality in Beijing to inform the design of short-term emission control strategies for mitigating major pollution episodes. We use a well-evaluated version of the WRF-Chem model at 3 km horizontal resolution to determine the daily accumulation of pollution over Beijing from local and regional sources in October 2014 under a range of meteorological conditions. Considering feasible emission reductions across residential, transport, power and industrial sectors, we find that one-day controls on local emissions have an immediate effect on PM2.5 concentrations on the same day, but can have lingering effects as much as five days later under stagnant conditions. One-day controls in surrounding provinces have the greatest effect in Beijing on the day following the controls, but may have negligible effects under northwesterly winds when local emissions dominate. To explore the contribution of different emission sectors and regions, we perform simulations with each source removed in turn. We find that residential and industrial sectors from neighbouring provinces dominate PM2.5 levels in Beijing during major pollution episodes, but that local residential emissions and industrial/residential emissions from more distant provinces can also contribute significantly during some episodes. We then perform a structured set of perturbed emission simulations to allow us to build statistical emulators that represent the relationships between emission sources and air pollution in Beijing over the period. We use these computationally fast emulators to determine the sensitivity of PM2.5 concentrations to different emission sources and the interactions between them, including for secondary PM, and to create pollutant response surfaces for daily average PM2.5 concentrations in Beijing. We use these surfaces to identify the short-term emission controls needed to meet the national air quality target of daily average PM2.5 less than 75 μg m−3 for pollution episodes of different intensities. We find that for heavily polluted days with daily mean PM2.5 higher than 225 μg m−3, even emission reductions of 90 % across all sectors over Beijing and surrounding provinces may be insufficient to meet the national air quality standards. These results highlight the regional nature of PM pollution and the challenges of tackling it during major pollution episodes.

AB - We investigate the contributions of local and regional emission sources to air quality in Beijing to inform the design of short-term emission control strategies for mitigating major pollution episodes. We use a well-evaluated version of the WRF-Chem model at 3 km horizontal resolution to determine the daily accumulation of pollution over Beijing from local and regional sources in October 2014 under a range of meteorological conditions. Considering feasible emission reductions across residential, transport, power and industrial sectors, we find that one-day controls on local emissions have an immediate effect on PM2.5 concentrations on the same day, but can have lingering effects as much as five days later under stagnant conditions. One-day controls in surrounding provinces have the greatest effect in Beijing on the day following the controls, but may have negligible effects under northwesterly winds when local emissions dominate. To explore the contribution of different emission sectors and regions, we perform simulations with each source removed in turn. We find that residential and industrial sectors from neighbouring provinces dominate PM2.5 levels in Beijing during major pollution episodes, but that local residential emissions and industrial/residential emissions from more distant provinces can also contribute significantly during some episodes. We then perform a structured set of perturbed emission simulations to allow us to build statistical emulators that represent the relationships between emission sources and air pollution in Beijing over the period. We use these computationally fast emulators to determine the sensitivity of PM2.5 concentrations to different emission sources and the interactions between them, including for secondary PM, and to create pollutant response surfaces for daily average PM2.5 concentrations in Beijing. We use these surfaces to identify the short-term emission controls needed to meet the national air quality target of daily average PM2.5 less than 75 μg m−3 for pollution episodes of different intensities. We find that for heavily polluted days with daily mean PM2.5 higher than 225 μg m−3, even emission reductions of 90 % across all sectors over Beijing and surrounding provinces may be insufficient to meet the national air quality standards. These results highlight the regional nature of PM pollution and the challenges of tackling it during major pollution episodes.

KW - Air quality

KW - PM2.5

KW - Beijing

KW - Source attribution

KW - Emulation

KW - Emission control

U2 - 10.5194/acp-21-4471-2021

DO - 10.5194/acp-21-4471-2021

M3 - Journal article

VL - 21

SP - 4471

EP - 4485

JO - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions

JF - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions

SN - 1680-7367

IS - 6

ER -