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Publication | Open Access

Abrupt but smaller than expected changes in surface air quality attributable to COVID-19 lockdowns

401

Citations

38

References

2021

Year

Abstract

The COVID-19 lockdowns led to major reductions in air pollutant emissions. Here, we quantitatively evaluate changes in ambient NO<sub>2</sub>, O<sub>3</sub>, and PM<sub>2.5</sub> concentrations arising from these emission changes in 11 cities globally by applying a deweathering machine learning technique. Sudden decreases in deweathered NO<sub>2</sub> concentrations and increases in O<sub>3</sub> were observed in almost all cities. However, the decline in NO<sub>2</sub> concentrations attributable to the lockdowns was not as large as expected, at reductions of 10 to 50%. Accordingly, O<sub>3</sub> increased by 2 to 30% (except for London), the total gaseous oxidant (O <i><sub>x</sub></i> = NO<sub>2</sub> + O<sub>3</sub>) showed limited change, and PM<sub>2.5</sub> concentrations decreased in most cities studied but increased in London and Paris. Our results demonstrate the need for a sophisticated analysis to quantify air quality impacts of interventions and indicate that true air quality improvements were notably more limited than some earlier reports or observational data suggested.

References

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