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Global fine-scale changes in ambient NO2 during COVID-19 lockdowns.

Authors :
Cooper, Matthew J.
Martin, Randall V.
Hammer, Melanie S.
Levelt, Pieternel F.
Veefkind, Pepijn
Lamsal, Lok N.
Krotkov, Nickolay A.
Brook, Jeffrey R.
McLinden, Chris A.
Source :
Nature; 1/20/2022, Vol. 601 Issue 7893, p380-387, 8p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Nitrogen dioxide (NO<subscript>2</subscript>) is an important contributor to air pollution and can adversely affect human health1–9. A decrease in NO<subscript>2</subscript> concentrations has been reported as a result of lockdown measures to reduce the spread of COVID-1910–20. Questions remain, however, regarding the relationship of satellite-derived atmospheric column NO<subscript>2</subscript> data with health-relevant ambient ground-level concentrations, and the representativeness of limited ground-based monitoring data for global assessment. Here we derive spatially resolved, global ground-level NO<subscript>2</subscript> concentrations from NO<subscript>2</subscript> column densities observed by the TROPOMI satellite instrument at sufficiently fine resolution (approximately one kilometre) to allow assessment of individual cities during COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020 compared to 2019. We apply these estimates to quantify NO<subscript>2</subscript> changes in more than 200 cities, including 65 cities without available ground monitoring, largely in lower-income regions. Mean country-level population-weighted NO<subscript>2</subscript> concentrations are 29% ± 3% lower in countries with strict lockdown conditions than in those without. Relative to long-term trends, NO<subscript>2</subscript> decreases during COVID-19 lockdowns exceed recent Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI)-derived year-to-year decreases from emission controls, comparable to 15 ± 4 years of reductions globally. Our case studies indicate that the sensitivity of NO<subscript>2</subscript> to lockdowns varies by country and emissions sector, demonstrating the critical need for spatially resolved observational information provided by these satellite-derived surface concentration estimates.The satellite instrument TROPOMI is used to assess ambient NO<subscript>2</subscript> levels at approximately one-kilometre resolution across 215 cities worldwide during COVID-19 lockdowns, finding about 30% lower NO<subscript>2</subscript> concentrations in countries with strict lockdowns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
601
Issue :
7893
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154773263
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-04229-0