Publication | Open Access
A Multiscale Tiered Approach to Quantify Contributions: A Case Study of PM2.5 in South Korea During 2010–2017
78
Citations
29
References
2020
Year
EngineeringAir Pollution MeasurementEnvironmental Impact AssessmentAir QualityClimate ModelingIndustrial EmissionParticulate MatterEarth ScienceSocial SciencesAir Pollution DispersionEnvironmental HealthAir Quality MonitoringImpact AssessmentStatisticsSouth KoreaSocial ImpactGeographyMultiscale Tiered ApproachForeign ContributionAir Pollution ClimatologyGlobal HealthAtmospheric TransportCase StudyAir Pollution
We estimated long-term foreign contributions to the particulate matter of 2.5 μm or less in diameter (PM2.5) concentrations in South Korea with a set of air quality simulations. The Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF)-Sparse Matrix Operator Kernel Emissions (SMOKE)-Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) modeling system was used to simulate the base and sensitivity case after a 50% reduction of foreign emissions. The effects of horizontal modeling grid resolutions (27- and 9-km) was also investigated. For this study, we chose PM2.5 in South Korea during 2010–2017 for the case study and emissions from China as a representative foreign source. The 9-km simulation results show that the 8-year average contribution of the Chinese emissions in 17 provinces ranged from 40–65%, which is ~4% lower than that from the 27-km simulation for the high-tier government segments (particularly prominent in coastal areas). However, for the same comparison for low-tier government segments (i.e., 250 prefectures), the 9-km simulation presented lowered the foreign contribution by up to 10% compared to that from the 27-km simulation. Based on our study results, we recommend using high-resolution modeling results for regional contribution analyses to develop an air quality action plan as the receptor coverage decreases.
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