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Abrupt but Smaller Than Expected Changes in Surface Air Quality Attributable to COVID-19 Lockdowns

Overview
Journal Sci Adv
Specialties Biology
Science
Date 2021 Feb 1
PMID 33523881
Citations 63
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Abstract

The COVID-19 lockdowns led to major reductions in air pollutant emissions. Here, we quantitatively evaluate changes in ambient NO, O, and PM concentrations arising from these emission changes in 11 cities globally by applying a deweathering machine learning technique. Sudden decreases in deweathered NO concentrations and increases in O were observed in almost all cities. However, the decline in NO concentrations attributable to the lockdowns was not as large as expected, at reductions of 10 to 50%. Accordingly, O increased by 2 to 30% (except for London), the total gaseous oxidant (O = NO + O) showed limited change, and PM 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.

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