Urban population exposure to NO<sub><i>x</i></sub> emissions from local shipping in three Baltic Sea harbour cities – a generic approach
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Published:2019-07-18
Issue:14
Volume:19
Page:9153-9179
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Ramacher Martin Otto PaulORCID, Karl MatthiasORCID, Bieser JohannesORCID, Jalkanen Jukka-PekkaORCID, Johansson Lasse
Abstract
Abstract. Ship emissions in ports can have a significant impact on
local air quality (AQ), population exposure and therefore human health in
harbour cities. We determined the impact of shipping emissions in harbours
on local AQ and population exposure in the Baltic Sea harbour cities Rostock
(Germany), Riga (Latvia) and the urban agglomeration of Gdańsk–Gdynia
(Poland) for 2012. An urban AQ study was performed using a global-to-local
chemistry transport model chain with the EPISODE-CityChem model for the
urban scale. We simulated NO2, O3 and PM concentrations in 2012
with the aim of determining the impact of local shipping activities on
population exposure in Baltic Sea harbour cities. Based on simulated
concentrations, dynamic population exposure to outdoor NO2
concentrations for all urban domains was calculated. We developed and used a
novel generic approach to model dynamic population activity in different
microenvironments based on publicly available data. The results of the new
approach are hourly microenvironment-specific population grids with a
spatial resolution of 100 m × 100 m. We multiplied
these grids with surface pollutant concentration fields of the same
resolution to calculate total population exposure. We found that the local
shipping impact on NO2 concentrations is significant, contributing
22 %, 11 % and 16 % to the total annually averaged grid mean
concentration for Rostock, Riga and Gdańsk–Gdynia, respectively. For
PM2.5, the contribution of shipping is substantially lower, at
1 %–3 %. When it comes to microenvironment-specific exposure to annual
NO2, the highest exposure to NO2 from all emission sources was
found in the home environment (54 %–59 %). Emissions from shipping have a
high impact on NO2 exposure in the port area (50 %–80 %), while the
influence in home, work and other environments is lower on average
(3 %–14 %) but still has high impacts close to the port areas and downwind
of them. Besides this, the newly developed generic approach allows for
dynamic population-weighted outdoor exposure calculations in European cities
without the necessity of individually measured data or large-scale surveys
on population data.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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