Using Remote Sensing to Understand Urban Air Quality Exposures and Inequities

Using Remote Sensing to Understand Urban Air Quality Exposures and Inequities
Author: Matthew Bechle
Publisher:
Total Pages: 110
Release: 2021
Genre: Air
ISBN:

Outdoor air pollution is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in the United States and around the world, but these impacts are not distributed equally. Countries, communities, and households that are socially and economically deprived often experience higher levels of air pollution. Yet too often these locations remain unmonitored or insufficiently monitored by traditional ground-based measurements. In this dissertation I employ satellite-based remote sensing of nitrogen dioxide (NO2), a major contributor to urban air pollution and a proxy for a toxic mix of pollutants associated with traffic and combustion emissions, to explore air pollution levels globally and within the US. Within the last two decades, satellite air pollution measurements have considerably expanded the capability to measure air pollution in previously unmonitored locations and across administrative boundaries. Cities serve as focal points, concentrating social and economic opportunities, but may also concentrate hazards, including air pollution. Strategic, compact urban design may be a way to improve a cities air quality, yet global empirical evidence has historically been limited by data availability and consistency. Here I use satellite-based measurements of NO2 and built-up land area to explore the relationship between city-wide NO2 levels and urban form characteristics (i.e., contiguity, circularity, percent impervious surfaces, percent vegetation coverage) for a global sample of 1,274 cities. Three of the urban form metrics (contiguity, circularity, and vegetation) have a small, but statistically significant relationship with city NO2 levels; however, the combined effect of these three attributes could be sizeable. For example, a city at the 75th percentile for all three metrics could accommodate, on average, twice the population as a city at the 25th percentile, while maintaining similar air quality. This work also shows that country level factors such as economic conditions and environmental policies may impact the urban form - air pollution relationships. Moreover, the impact of urban form on air quality may be larger for small cities, an important finding given the large portion of current and projected future population that lives in small cities. Satellite air pollution measurements are limited by their spatial resolution. For example, they are well suited for exploring NO2 levels between cities, as described above; however, alone they typically cannot capture the fine-scale spatial variability needed to characterize population exposure to air pollution. Satellite-based empirical models combine the regional concentrations from satellite measurements with ground-based measurements and local land use and land cover information to predict air pollution concentrations with high spatial resolution (typically 1 km or less). These models have become ubiquitous, yet few studies have investigated how satellite and other regional air pollution covariates impact these models. In this dissertation, I address this gap by exploring the effect of several regional NO2 covariates in an empirical model for annual average NO2 over the contiguous US and find that inclusion of a regional covariate improves model predictive power, yet choice of covariate has limited impact. Additionally, empirical models can be data and computationally intensive, and are often limited to long-term averages and a small number of years. Here, I address these issues by developing a straightforward and easy to implement spatiotemporal scaling technique to extend the temporal coverage of a year-2006 annual NO2 model to over a decade (2000-2010) of monthly NO2 estimates. The resulting estimates are data publicly available online. The spatiotemporal scaling technique and these data have since been used in several publications exploring health effects and residential exposure disparities associated with outdoor NO2 levels. Residential air pollution disparities in the contiguous US have become a topic of recent interest. Children are a particularly vulnerable population and disparities in their air pollution exposure could have lasting impacts. Despite this, little has been done to track outdoor air pollution levels at schools throughout the US. In this dissertation, I add to this body of work by exploring a criteria pollutant, NO2, and by considering home and school locations to better understand the role of public schools in students' total exposure. I find that, on average, racial and ethnic minority students live in and attend schools in areas with higher NO2 levels than their non-Hispanic, white peers, and that impoverished students (defined here as those eligible for school lunch programs) attend, on average, schools with higher NO2 levels than their non-impoverished peers. Minority students are much more likely than their white peers to live in areas above the World Health Organization's annual outdoor NO2 guideline, and this likelihood is larger at schools than at home locations, particularly when comparing predominately minority schools to predominately white schools. This finding -- that public schools may exacerbate disparities -- has important implications for addressing childhood inequities. Notably, strategies that do not address school exposure inequities may fail to address overall exposure inequities. Moreover, strategies to reduce school segregation or to identify and mitigate NO2 levels at the most at-risk schools could have a significant impact on children's overall NO2 inequities. This work also shows that race and income are intertwined; independently, more impoverished schools and schools with more minority students tend to be in areas with higher NO2 levels than more well-off schools and schools with fewer minority students. Schools in large urban areas exhibit disparities by race/ethnicity alone, even when controlling for school-level income. This work highlights NO2 disparities at public schools throughout the contiguous US. Those national disparities are driven largely by disparities in the 50 largest urban areas, which provides motivation for additional exploration and tracking of air pollution levels at these locations. In summary, in this dissertation I have demonstrated how satellite measurements and empirical models that incorporate satellite measurements vastly improve the capability of uncovering and monitoring air pollution exposure disparities for a global and US-wide analysis. Recently launched and soon to be launched satellite-borne sensors promise higher spatial and temporal resolution air pollution measurements. Those measurements will allow for better understanding of concentrations and emission sources, as well as improve satellite-based empirical models, facilitating further tracking and characterization of exposures and exposure disparities from global to local scales.

Integrated Human Exposure to Air Pollution

Integrated Human Exposure to Air Pollution
Author: Nuno Canha
Publisher: MDPI
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2021-08-31
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 3036510826

The book “Integrated human exposure to air pollution” aimed to increase knowledge about human exposure in different micro-environments, or when citizens are performing specific tasks, to demonstrate methodologies for the understanding of pollution sources and their impact on indoor and ambient air quality, and, ultimately, to identify the most effective mitigation measures to decrease human exposure and protect public health. Taking advantage of the latest available tools, such as internet of things (IoT), low-cost sensors and a wide access to online platforms and apps by the citizens, new methodologies and approaches can be implemented to understand which factors can influence human exposure to air pollution. This knowledge, when made available to the citizens, along with the awareness of the impact of air pollution on human life and earth systems, can empower them to act, individually or collectively, to promote behavioral changes aiming to reduce pollutants’ emissions. Overall, this book gathers fourteen innovative studies that provide new insights regarding these important topics within the scope of human exposure to air pollution. A total of five main areas were discussed and explored within this book and, hopefully, can contribute to the advance of knowledge in this field.

Traffic-Related Air Pollution

Traffic-Related Air Pollution
Author: Haneen Khreis
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 650
Release: 2020-08-20
Genre: Transportation
ISBN: 0128181230

Traffic-Related Air Pollution synthesizes and maps TRAP and its impact on human health at the individual and population level. The book analyzes mitigating standards and regulations with a focus on cities. It provides the methods and tools for assessing and quantifying the associated road traffic emissions, air pollution, exposure and population-based health impacts, while also illuminating the mechanisms underlying health impacts through clinical and toxicological research. Real-world implications are set alongside policy options, emerging technologies and best practices. Finally, the book recommends ways to influence discourse and policy to better account for the health impacts of TRAP and its societal costs. - Overviews existing and emerging tools to assess TRAP's public health impacts - Examines TRAP's health effects at the population level - Explores the latest technologies and policies--alongside their potential effectiveness and adverse consequences--for mitigating TRAP - Guides on how methods and tools can leverage teaching, practice and policymaking to ameliorate TRAP and its effects

Air Quality in Cities

Air Quality in Cities
Author: Nicolas Moussiopoulos
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2013-11-11
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3662052172

Urban areas are major sources of air pollution. Pollutant emissions affecting air quality in cities are considered to have adverse consequences for human health. Public and government concern about environmental issues arising from urban air pollution has increased over the last decades. The urban air pollution problem is widespread throughout the world and it is important to find ways of eliminating or at least reducing the risks for human health. The fundamentals of the physical and chemical processes occurring during air pollutant transport in the atmosphere are nowadays understood to a large extent. In particular, modelling of such processes has experienced a remarkable growth in the last decades. Monitoring capabilities have also improved markedly in the most urban areas around the world. However, neither modelling nor monitoring can solve urban air pollution problems, as they are only a first step in improving useful information for future regulations. The defining of efficient control strategies can not be achieved without a clear knowledge of the complete pollution process, i.e. emission, atmospheric transport and transformation, and deposition at the receptor. Improving our ability to establish valid urban scale source-receptor relation ships has been the objective of SA TURN, one of the 14 subprojects of EURO TRAC-2. Similar to the other subprojects of this co-ordinated environmental pro ject within the EUREKA initiative, SA TURN brought together international groups of scientists to work on problems directly related to atmospheric chemistry and physics. The present volume summarises the scientific results of SATURN.

Air Quality Research Using Remote Sensing

Air Quality Research Using Remote Sensing
Author: Maria João Costa
Publisher: Mdpi AG
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2022-12-19
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9783036558936

Air pollution is a worldwide environmental hazard that poses serious consequences not only for human health and the climate but also for agriculture, ecosystems, and cultural heritage, among other factors. According to the WHO, there are 8 million premature deaths every year as a result of exposure to ambient air pollution. In addition, more than 90% of the world's population live in areas where the air quality is poor, exceeding the recommended limits. On the other hand, air pollution and the climate co-influence one another through complex physicochemical interactions in the atmosphere that alter the Earth's energy balance and have implications for climate change and the air quality. It is important to measure specific atmospheric parameters and pollutant compound concentrations, monitor their variations, and analyze different scenarios with the aim of assessing the air pollution levels and developing early warning and forecast systems as a means of improving the air quality and safeguarding public health. Such measures can also form part of efforts to achieve a reduction in the number of air pollution casualties and mitigate climate change phenomena. This book contains contributions focusing on remote sensing techniques for evaluating air quality, including the use of in situ data, modeling approaches, and the synthesis of different instrumentations and techniques. The papers published in this book highlight the importance and relevance of air quality studies and the potential of remote sensing, particularly that conducted from Earth observation platforms, to shed light on this topic.

Urban Air Pollution Monitoring by Ground-Based Stations and Satellite Data

Urban Air Pollution Monitoring by Ground-Based Stations and Satellite Data
Author: Mikalai Filonchyk
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 157
Release: 2018-05-11
Genre: Science
ISBN: 331978045X

This book examines air pollution of a big city using multi-year and multi-season data from ground-based air monitoring stations and satellite sounding data, which provides more clear and detailed information on the main sources of air pollution, the long-term trend of pollution, the influence of meteorological parameters on pollution levels, and trajectories of polluted air masses. For example, the book shows that particulate matter from local sources is transported from deserts to create air quality challenges. It also analyzes the effects of desert and semi-desert landscapes on high concentrations of pollutants.

Urban Remote Sensing

Urban Remote Sensing
Author: Qihao Weng
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 315
Release: 2018-02-20
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0429888562

Urban Remote Sensing, Second Edition assembles a team of professional experts to provide a much-needed update on the applications of remote sensing technology to urban and suburban areas. This book reflects new developments in spaceborne and airborne sensors, image processing methods and techniques, and wider applications of urban remote sensing to meet societal and economic challenges. In various sections of the book the authors address methods for upscaling urban feature extraction to the global scale, new methods in mapping and detecting urban landscape features and structures, and mapping and monitoring urbanization in developing countries. Additionally, readers are provided with valuable case studies such as the HEAT (Heat Energy Assessment Technologies) project in Calgary, Canada and the use of VHR (very high resolution) satellite monitoring in Salzburg, Austria to tackle challenges of urban green planning. Features Explores the most up-to-date developments in the field of urban remote sensing Integrates both technical and practical aspects covering all different topics of global urban growth issues Provides new and updated contributions addressing data mining of remotely sensed big data, recent urban studies on a global scale, accuracy assessment and validation, and new technical challenges Examines various applications of urban remote sensing in support of urban planning, environmental management, and sustainable urban development Authors are renowned figures in the field of remote sensing

Environmental Sensing and Monitoring Using Digital Camera (Penerbit USM)

Environmental Sensing and Monitoring Using Digital Camera (Penerbit USM)
Author: Lim Hwee San
Publisher: Penerbit USM
Total Pages: 85
Release:
Genre: Environmental monitoring
ISBN: 9838618977

This monograph is the outcome of 15 years experience of working with satellite images with the funding from IRPA RM7, ESCAP NASDA, Science Fund and several short term grants. It introduces a new methodology and algorithms for water and air quality monitoring by using conventional digital camera as a sensor to provide multi-spectral remote sensing data. The image is either captured by a digital camera mounted in an unman aircraft vehicle (UAV) or directly captured from a light air-craft. New algorithms were developed to correlate the pollutant concentration with the digital images. The algorithms can also generate a map of the pollutant concentration of the studied area. Pollutant information is very important for survey information, tourism information, development assessment, coastal preservation and area development planning. This new methodology allows images to be captured below the cloud level. Thus, with this method and the algorithms, cloud cover problem of satellite and airborne images can be overcome. They also overcome the problems of time, money, and resources wasted in collecting in-situ data for algorithm calibration of cloud cover satellite images. Furthermore, they provide real-time, high accuracy information. Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penerbit Universiti Sains Malaysia