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The Impact on Urban Air Quality of the COVID-19 Lockdown Periods in 2020: The Case of Nicosia, Cyprus

Giorgos Alexandrou, +3 more
- 07 Oct 2021 - 
- Vol. 12, Iss: 10, pp 1310
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TLDR
In this article, the impact of lockdown measures on the urban air quality in Nicosia, in Cyprus, was assessed by using three criteria pollutants, nitrogen dioxide (NO2), carbon monoxide (CO) and Particulate Matter (PM10), taken from three Air Quality Monitoring Stations; two urban stations and one reference-background.
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to assess the impact of the lockdown measures in 2020 on the urban air quality in Nicosia capital city, in Cyprus—an island-country in the East Mediterranean—which is often affected by transboundary dust pollution. The study focuses on three criteria pollutants, nitrogen dioxide (NO2), carbon monoxide (CO) and Particulate Matter (PM10), taken from three Air Quality Monitoring Stations; two urban stations and one reference-background. The results of this study show that the decrease in traffic, which is the main source of high concentrations of pollutants in the urban area, reached up to 66.5% during the lockdown. At the beginning of the lockdown period, it exhibited a downward trend of 29% for CO concentration, and downward trend 43% for NO2 and PM10 concentrations. The NO2 concentration exhibited an upward trend towards the end of the lockdown; with the indication that this was due to meteorological conditions relevant to the monitoring stations and the transport of NO2 concentrations from sources that cannot be tracked. PM10 concentrations exhibited a varying behaviour as observed in the trends, where the decreasing trend was followed by an increasing trend due to transboundary air pollution episodes occurring in the same period.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Spatiotemporal variations of ozone exposure and its risks to vegetation and human health in Cyprus: an analysis across a gradient of altitudes

TL;DR: In this article , the authors evaluated ground-level ozone (O 3 ) and nitrogen oxides (NO and NO 2 ) at four regional background stations at different altitudes over 2014−2016 and found that O 3 is a major environmental and public health issue in Cyprus, and policies must be adopted to mitigate O 3 precursor emissions at local and regional scales.
References
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Clinical characteristics and intrauterine vertical transmission potential of COVID-19 infection in nine pregnant women: a retrospective review of medical records.

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper evaluated the clinical characteristics of COVID-19 pneumonia in pregnant women and the intrauterine vertical transmission potential of CoV-19 infection in late pregnancy.
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TL;DR: A new-type coronav virus, tentatively named by World Health Organization as the 2019-new coronavirus (2019-nCoV), had caused this outbreak in Wuhan city, Hubei Province, China, it was announced today.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in air quality during the lockdown in Barcelona (Spain) one month into the SARS-CoV-2 epidemic.

TL;DR: After two weeks of lockdown, urban air pollution markedly decreased but with substantial differences among pollutants, and there are still open questions on why PM10 levels were much less reduced than BC and NO2 and on what is the proportion of the abatement of pollution directly related to the lockdown, without meteorological interferences.
Journal ArticleDOI

COVID-19 lockdowns cause global air pollution declines.

TL;DR: It is found that, after accounting for meteorological variations, lockdown events have reduced the population-weighted concentration of nitrogen dioxide and particulate matter levels by about 60% and 31% in 34 countries, with mixed effects on ozone.
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