10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, 17-18 October 2005 Air pollution at street level in European cities Nicolas Moussiopoulos,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Purpose: Integrated assessment of options to control air pollution in Europe Model the full chain from sources to impacts Multi-effects: acidification,
Advertisements

AUT / LHTEE Street Emission Ceilings (SEC) exercise Task leader: Nicolas Moussiopoulos Aristotle University Thessaloniki Team: Dick van den Hout, TNO Steinar.
Marion Wichmann-Fiebig II 5 Abteilungsleiterin „Luft“ 1 Review of the Gothenburg Protocol Link to potential PM control under CLRTAP: – Specifies control.
Summary of relevant information in the CAFE Position paper on PM Martin Meadows UNECE PMEG Berlin, 23 & 24 May 2005.
Air quality in Europe report. Air pollution impacts human health, contributes to climate change and damages ecosystems. Here are some of the pollutants.
S Larssen: PM-PP-Stockholm-Oct-2003.ppt slide 1 PM in Europe - State and past trends Emissions and concentration levels Steinar Larssen Norwegian Institute.
11 th EIONET AQ workshop La Rochelle 26-27/10/2006 Air Quality in EEA and EECCA in Europe’s Environment assessment report, th Europe’s Environment.
EUROPEAN UNION INITIATIVES AND REQUIREMENTS : AIR QUALITY ASSESSMENT AS A POLICY MECHANISM Sonja Vidič Meteorological and Hydrological Service of Croatia.
RAINS review 2004 The RAINS model: Health impacts of PM.
The use of the BelEUROS model for policy support at LNE TEMIS-workshop 8/9 October 2007 on behalf of: Mirka Van der Elst Flemish Ministry of the Environment,
University of Aveiro Final Meeting and Project Review 23/24 June 2003 Gdansk University of Aveiro Emissions and Air Quality Modelling Department of Environment.
Quantifying the Effect of Intelligent Transport Systems on CO 2 Emissions from Road Transportation Zissis Samaras Laboratory of Applied Thermodynamics.
Application of air quality strategies of Western Europe for modeling of the transboundary air pollution impact on the Russian Federation with the GAINS.
Update of EEA´s Core Set Indicator th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Bern, 30 th September 2014 Alberto González Ortiz Project Manager – AQ data.
Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications DETEC Federal Office for the Environment FOEN Modelling the spatial distribution.
11th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, La Rochelle, October 2006 WELCOME! on behalf of EEA’s Air and transport group to the.
Draft conclusions and key recommendations of the CAFE Position Paper on PM Martin Meadows and Bernd Seifert CAFE Workshop, 20 & 21 October 2003 Web link:
SOURCE APPORTIONMENT of PARTICULATE MATTER Imperial College 23 rd April 2010 APRIL:Air Pollution Research in London.
Simulation of European emissions impacts on particulate matter concentrations in 2010 using Models-3 Rob Lennard, Steve Griffiths and Paul Sutton (RWE.
The ARTEMIS tools for estimating the transport pollutant emissions Artemis project - EC DG Tren COST346 - Heavy duty vehicles emissions M. André, INRETS,
Senate department of urban development Unit IX D: air pollution and noise control, M. Lutz 1 Berlin’s Air Quality Strategy: measures and expected effects.
Air quality and health impact assessment AQ information at the regional scale, urban background scale and street scale past, present and future air quality.
Reinhard Mechler, Markus Amann, Wolfgang Schöpp International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis A methodology to estimate changes in statistical life.
Developing emissions projections at a regional scale Carlo Trozzi, Stefano Crocetti, Rita Vaccaro, Enzo Piscitello Techne Consulting srl -Via G. Ricci.
Urban scale assessment in CAFE Roel van Aalst with support from Peter Bruckmann, Juergen Schneider, Martin Williams.
EIONET11-APREPORT2004-STL Air Pollution in Europe 2004 Based mainly upon AirBase data as well as on gap-filled emissions data (AEAT) ETC/ACC project group:
P. Otorepec, M. Gregorič IVZ RS Use of rutinely collected air pollution and health data on local level for simple evaluation of health impact.
New Directive 2008/50/EC on ambient air quality and cleaner air for Europe Aiga Kāla, Valts Vilnītis SIA Estonian, Latvian & Lithuanian Environment February.
THE PEP Sub-regional workshop September 2013 Health effects of particulate matter: Policy implications for EECCA countries Marie-Eve Héroux Technical Officer,
| Folie 1 Assessment of Representativeness of Air Quality Monitoring Stations Geneva, Wolfgang Spangl.
UN ECE WORKSHOP ON INTERACTION BETWEEN AIR-QUALITY MONITORING AND AIR-PROTECTION STRATEGIES IN EECCA Geneva, 11 June th Pan-European Environment.
Regional Air Quality Plans: assessment of plan efficacy through integrated assessment modelling and other local models G. Vialetto 1, G. Calori 3, I. D’Elia.
Environment 1 The current work on Air Quality Indicators Best needed “ Population exposure” vs. Best available “Population weighted concentrations” Ute.
Attaining urban air quality objectives- links to transboundary air pollution Helen ApSimon, Tim Oxley and Marios Valiantis UK Centre for Integrated Assessment.
Spittelauer Lände 5, 1090 Vienna Overview PM10 NO 2 Ozone Measures EIONET Oslo Air Quality in Austria.
Working Group on Effects, 29th Session, September 2010 Task Force on Health: Results: PM Michal Krzyzanowski TFH Chair WHO/Europe, European Centre.
1 Monitoring and assessment in Europe Joining forces between EMEP and EEA Roel van Aalst 30 May 2001.
ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH INDICATORS FOR EUROPE: A PILOT STUDY OF INDICATORS OF AIR POLLUTION & HEALTH D Dalbokova, 1 M Sadeh, 2 M Krzyzanowski, 1 P Wilkinson.
11 September 2015 On the role of measurements and modelling in Dutch air quality policies Guus Velders The Netherlands (RIVM)
Possible use of Copernicus MACC-II modeling products in EEAs assessment work Leonor Tarrasón, Jan Horálek, Laure Malherbe, Philipp Schneider, Anthony Ung,
Working Group on Effects, 29th Session, September 2010 Task Force on Health: Results - common issues Michal Krzyzanowski TFH Chair WHO/Europe, European.
Senate department for urban development Unit IX D: air pollution and noise control, M. Lutz Integrating particulate matter Integrating particulate matter:
Scope for further emission reductions: The range between Current Legislation and Maximum Technically Feasible Reductions M. Amann, I. Bertok, R. Cabala,
The GAINS optimization approach – Basic background information Fabian Wagner International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) IIASA workshop.
TFIAM meeting 27 May 2005 Berlin EEA scenario 2005 project : Low greenhouse gas emission pathways Presentation by Hans Eerens EEA Topic Centre Air and.
Markus Amann International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis Cost-effectiveness Analysis in CAFE and the Need for Information about Urban Air Quality.
Uniform limit value for air quality: Bring down PM2.5 everywhere below a AQ limit value Gap closure concept: Reduce PM2.5 levels everywhere by same.
Centralised and national submissions of transport emissions Giorgos Mellios Thomas Papageorgiou Leon Ntziachristos EEA project manager: Martin Adams LABORATORY.
1 European air indicator reporting Process and experience © iStockphoto.com/cmisje.
SPATIAL CONSIDERATIONS Tim Oxley & Helen ApSimon UK National Focal Centre for Integrated Assessment Imperial College London.
Evaluation of pollution levels in urban areas of selected EMEP countries Alexey Gusev, Victor Shatalov Meteorological Synthesizing Centre - East.
1 Černikovský, Krejčí, Volná (ETC/ACM): Air pollution by ozone in Europe during the summer 2012 & comparison with previous years 17th EIONET Workshop on.
Air Quality in EEA and EECCA Europe’s Environment assessment report, th Europe’s Environment assessment report, 2007 (‘the Belgrade report’) Hans.
Final Meeting of the CAPACT project, 4-6 July 2007, Almaty, Kazakhstan M. Krzyzanowski and Kubanychbek Monolbaev WHO Regional Office for Europe EECCA participation.
‘Air Monitoring and Protection Strategies in EECCA’ UNECE/WGEMA Workshop, Geneva, 11 June 2007 Dr Hans-Guido Mücke for the WHO European Centre for Environment.
RedCORE DG-13 issues lars M. Svendsen, chair of REDCORE DG
Joint thematic session: from hemispheric to local scale air pollution; Twin Site project Task Force on Measurements and modelling A. Colette (TFMM),
Joint thematic session on B(a)P pollution: main activities and results
The CAMS Policy products
COPERT 4 training workshop
Markus Amann International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) Updating the Baseline and Maximum Control scenarios State of play of the.
M. Amann, I. Bertok, R. Cabala, J. Cofala, F. Gyarfas, C. Heyes, Z
Urban PM and the integrated assessment.
Air Quality in Europe – 2017 report
Study on non-compliance of ozone target values and potential air quality improvements in relation to ozone.
IMPROVING PUBLIC INFORMATION
CITY-DELTA Objectives, Methodology, and Results
PM observations in Europe a review of AirBase information
Contributions to total changes in emissions of ozone precursors
An Overview of Europe’s Air Quality and Air Pollutant Emissions
Presentation transcript:

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October 2005 Air pollution at street level in European cities Nicolas Moussiopoulos, Zissis Samaras, Liana Kalognomou, Myrto Giannouli, Sofia Eleftheriadou, Giorgos Mellios, ETC/ACC - Aristotle University Thessaloniki, Greece EEA project manager, Jaroslav Fiala EEA technical report sent for country review

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October Background Traffic-related air pollution is one of the most pressing problems in urban areas. Evidence of the adverse health effects of fine particulate matter is continuously emerging. Most of the traffic- related emissions are in the fine particulates range (<PM2.5) Human exposure to increased pollutant concentrations in densely populated urban areas is high. LV are in case of NO2, PM10 currently frequently exceeded namely at urban/traffic hotspots The report deals with the air pollution levels at traffic hotspot areas in 20 European cities, compared to the urban background concentrations for NO 2, (NO x ), PM10 and PM2.5 Base on the request of DG Env the current situation (reference year 2000) and two scenarios aimed at 2030 (Current Legislation, CLE, and Maximum Feasible Reductions, MFR) were considered to analyse and project air quality

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October Methodology outline The methodology was developed in the ETC/ACC ‘Street Emission Ceiling (SEC)’ project aiming to determine which local emission reductions are needed in streets in order to reach certain air quality thresholds Application of the urban scale OFIS model with EMEP model results to obtain the urban background Application of the local(street canyon) OSPM model with OFIS model results to estimate hotspot air pollution levels Urban emission inventories (2000) were provided by for each city (MERLIN project) Urban emission projections (2030) predicted according to the emission control scenario CLE For local emissions (2000) vehicle fleets from TREMOVE and TRENDS were used for calculating emissions with COPERT Street level concentrations were calculated for three hypothetical street canyon configurations (wide, square and narrow) representing types existing across Europe The hypothetical street canyons were defined from the ‘Typology Methodology’ representing an attempt to categorise street types

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October Urban and air quality Annual NO2 urban background concentrations Range of OFIS model results for the reference year 2000 compared with the range of observations and average value of all stations.

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October Urban and air quality Annual PM10 urban background concentrations Range of OFIS model results for the reference year 2000 compared with the range of observations and average value of all stations To account for natural primary and secondary PM a constant value of 17μg/m3 has been assumed in all cities. This value was estimated as an average across all data available for the annual mean PM10 concentration measured at the EMEP

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October Urban and air quality Annual PM2.5 urban background concentrations Range of OFIS model results for the reference year 2000 compared with the range of observations and average value of all stations

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October Local air quality - street increments 1/3 Air quality at street level calculated using the OSPM for three hypothetical street canyons Narrow case (h=15 m, w=10 m), average traffic veh/day Square canyon (h=15 m, w=15 m), average traffic veh/day Wide canyon (h=15 m, w=40 m), average traffic veh/day Typology methodology used for HDV%, vehicle speed and street canyon geometry TREMOVE/TRENDS results used to classify each city into each category (7% or 15% HDV) considered according to typology methodology Differences between the street increments for the three canyon geometries are generally small. In most cases the largest increments are observed for the wide canyon due to the increased number of vehicles. However applicability of the OSPM model is doubtful in case of wide canyon.

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October Local air quality - street increments 2/3 Mean annual NO2 street increments (μg/m3) for the reference year 2000 in 20 European cities: model results for the narrow canyon case compared with observations

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October Local air quality - street increments 3/3 Mean annual PM10 street increments (μg/m3) for the reference year 2000 in 20 European cities: model results for the narrow canyon case compared with observations

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October Scenarios - NO 2 Annual mean air quality at regional (EMEP), urban (OFIS) and street scale (OSPM) for selected cities in the reference year (2000) and the CLE and MFR scenarios

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October Scenarios – PM10 Annual mean air quality at regional (EMEP), urban (OFIS) and street scale (OSPM) for selected cities in the reference year (2000) and the CLE and MFR scenarios To account for natural primary and secondary PM a constant value of 17μg/m3 has been assumed in all cities

10th EIONET Workshop on Air Quality Management and Assessment, Vilnius, October Conclusions OFIS and OSPM model results were analysed to discuss air quality limit value exceedances in the 20 European cities considered The exceedance days calculated for PM10 in 2000 are higher than allowed in almost all cities in the narrow canyon, in 14 cities in the square canyon and in half the cities in the wide canyon case In the year 2030, the model results imply that at street level for a narrow canyon, the annual limit value for NO2 will be met in only very few cases in the CLE scenario and in most cases in the MFR scenario, whereas the indicative limit value for PM10 is not expected to be met even in the MFR scenario The allowed number of exceedances according to the 2010 limit value is expected to be met for NO2 in all cities for the narrow canyon case even in the CLE scenario, though exceedances of the PM10 indicative limit value are observed in certain cases even for the MFR scenario For PM2.5 the reduction is in line with the significant reductions in the urban and in street scale PM emissions attributed to the introduction of EURO 5 and EURO 6 compliant vehicles. Particular unfavourable cases observed in certain cities with exceptionally high concentrations are difficult to model unless the specific street characteristics are known in detail Detailed local traffic data combined with air quality measurements and data on the specific street are required in order to evaluate the overall methodology of this report as well as to determine the appropriateness of the selection of the particular street canyon configurations The urban background concentrations with the available top-down emission inventories should be compared against up-to-date, bottom-up local emission inventories upon which local city development scenarios can also be evaluated. Finally, reliable vehicle fleets for new and non EU Member States according to the latest version of TREMOVE are required to obtain accurate street level air quality projections for these cities also.