Drivers of PM2.5 Episodes and Exceedance in India: A Synthesis From the COALESCE Network

Author:

Venkataraman Chandra1ORCID,Anand Abhinav1,Maji Sujit12,Barman Neeldip1ORCID,Tiwari Dewashish1,Muduchuru Kaushik1ORCID,Sharma Arushi1,Gupta Ganesh1,Bhardwaj Ankur3,Haswani Diksha3ORCID,Pullokaran Delwin3ORCID,Yadav Kajal3ORCID,Sunder Raman Ramya3ORCID,Imran Mohd.4,Habib Gazala4,Kapoor Taveen Singh1ORCID,Anurag Gupta15ORCID,Sharma Renuka1,Phuleria Harish C.15,Qadri Adnan Mateen6,Singh Gyanesh Kumar6ORCID,Gupta Tarun6,Dhandapani Abisheg7ORCID,Kumar R. Naresh7ORCID,Mukherjee Sauryadeep8,Chatterjee Abhijit8,Rabha Shahadev9,Saikia Binoy K.9,Saikia Prasenjit9,Ganguly Dilip10,Chaudhary Pooja11,Sinha Baerbel11ORCID,Roy Sayantee4ORCID,Muthalagu Akila12,Qureshi Asif12ORCID,Lian Yang2ORCID,Pandithurai Govindan2ORCID,Prasad Laxmi13,Murthy Sadashiva13ORCID,Duhan Sandeep Singh14ORCID,Laura Jitender S.14ORCID,Chhangani Anil Kumar15,Najar Tanveer Ahmad16ORCID,Jehangir Arshid16ORCID,Kesarkar Amit P.17ORCID,Singh Vikas17

Affiliation:

1. Interdisciplinary Program in Climate Studies Indian Institute of Technology Bombay Mumbai India

2. Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology Pune Pune India

3. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Bhopal Bhopal India

4. Indian Institute of Technology Delhi New Delhi India

5. Environmental Science and Engineering Department IIT Bombay Mumbai India

6. Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur Kanpur India

7. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Birla Institute of Technology Mesra Ranchi India

8. Bose Institute Darjeeling India

9. Coal & Energy Group Materials Science and Technology Division CSIR‐North East Institute of Science & Technology Jorhat India

10. Centre for Atmospheric Sciences Indian Institute of Technology Delhi New Delhi India

11. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Mohali Mohali India

12. Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad Hyderabad India

13. Department of Environmental Engineering SJCE JSS Science and Technology University Mysuru India

14. Maharshi Dayanand University Rohtak India

15. Maharaja Ganga Singh University Bikaner India

16. Department of Environmental Science University of Kashmir Srinagar India

17. National Atmospheric Research Laboratory Tirupati India

Abstract

AbstractEmission sources influencing high particulate air pollution levels and related mortality in India have been studied earlier on country‐wide and sub‐national scales. Here, we use novel data sets of emissions (for 2019) and observations created under the Carbonaceous Aerosol Emissions, Source Apportionment, and Climate Impacts network in India (Venkataraman et al., 2020, https://doi.org/10.1175/bams‐d‐19‐0030.1) in WRF‐Chem simulations to evaluate drivers of high PM2.5 levels during episodes and in airsheds with different pollution levels. We identify airsheds in “extreme” (110–140 μg/m3), “severe” (80–110 μg/m3) and “significant” (40–80 μg/m3) exceedance of the Indian annual ambient air quality standard (National Ambient Air Quality Standards [NAAQS]) of 40 μg/m3 for PM2.5. We find that primary organic matter and anthropogenic mineral matter (largely coal fly‐ash) drive high PM2.5 levels, both annually and during high PM2.5 episodes. PM2.5 episodes are driven by organic aerosol in north India (Mohali) in wintertime but are additionally influenced by mineral matter and secondary inorganics in central (Bhopal), south India (Mysuru) and eastern India (Shyamnagar). Across airsheds in exceedance of the NAAQS and during high PM2.5 episodes, primary PM2.5 emissions arise largely from the residential sector (50%–75%). Formal sector emissions (industry, thermal power and transport; 40%–55%) drive airshed and episode scale PM2.5 exceedance in northern and eastern India. Agricultural residue burning emissions predominate (50%–75%) on episode scales, both in northern and central India, but not on annual scales. Interestingly, residential sector emissions strongly influence (60%–90%) airsheds in compliance with the NAAQS (annual mean PM2.5 < 40 μg/m3), implying the need for modern residential energy transitions for the reduction of ambient air pollution across India.

Funder

Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Reference107 articles.

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