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The regional impact of urban emissions on air quality in Europe: the role of the urban canopy effects

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigated how the urban emission impact (UEI) is modulated by the urban canopy meteorological forcing (UCMF) for present-day climate conditions (2015-2016) for selected central European cities (Berlin, Budapest, Munich, Prague, Vienna and Warsaw).
Abstract
. Urban areas are hot spots of intense emissions, and they influence air quality not only locally but on a regional or even global scale. The impact of urban emissions over different scales depends on the dilution and chemical transformation of the urban plumes which are governed by the local- and regional-scale meteorological conditions. These are influenced by the presence of urbanized land surface via the so-called urban canopy meteorological forcing (UCMF). In this study, we investigate for selected central European cities (Berlin, Budapest, Munich, Prague, Vienna and Warsaw) how the urban emission impact (UEI) is modulated by the UCMF for present-day climate conditions (2015–2016) using two regional climate models, the regional climate models RegCM and Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with Chemistry (WRF-Chem; its meteorological part), and two chemistry transport models, Comprehensive Air Quality Model with Extensions (CAMx) coupled to either RegCM and WRF and the “chemical” component of WRF-Chem. The UCMF was calculated by replacing the urbanized surface by a rural one, while the UEI was estimated by removing all anthropogenic emissions from the selected cities. We analyzed the urban-emission-induced changes in near-surface concentrations of NO2 , O3 and PM 2.5 . We found increases in NO2 and PM 2.5 concentrations over cities by 4–6 ppbv and 4–6  µg m−3 , respectively, meaning that about 40 %–60 % and 20 %–40 % of urban concentrations of NO2 and PM 2.5 are caused by local emissions, and the rest is the result of emissions from the surrounding rural areas. We showed that if UCMF is included, the UEI of these pollutants is about 40 %–60 % smaller, or in other words, the urban emission impact is overestimated if urban canopy effects are not taken into account. In case of ozone, models due to UEI usually predict decreases of around −2 to −4  ppbv (about 10 %–20 %), which is again smaller if UCMF is considered (by about 60 %). We further showed that the impact on extreme (95th percentile) air pollution is much stronger, and the modulation of UEI is also larger for such situations. Finally, we evaluated the contribution of the urbanization-induced modifications of vertical eddy diffusion to the modulation of UEI and found that it alone is able to explain the modeled decrease in the urban emission impact if the effects of UCMF are considered. In summary, our results showed that the meteorological changes resulting from urbanization have to be included in regional model studies if they intend to quantify the regional footprint of urban emissions. Ignoring these meteorological changes can lead to the strong overestimation of UEI.

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Citations
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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of near surface ozone in air quality simulations forced by a regional climate model over Europe for the period 1991–2000

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate near surface ozone simulated with the modelling system RegCM3/CAMx against ozone measurements from the EMEP database for the recent decade 1991-2000.
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Decoupling of urban CO 2 and air pollutant emission reductions during the European SARS-CoV-2 lockdown

TL;DR: In this article, an integrated observational analysis based on long-term in-situ multispecies eddy flux measurements, allowing for quantifying near-real-time changes of urban surface emissions for key air quality and climate tracers.
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Does the resolution of megacity emissions impact large scale ozone

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the impact of megacity emission on large scale tropospheric ozone using the regional WRF-Chem model and concluded that high resolution is more important for local air pollution studies than for large scale ozone changes relevant for climate studies.
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Modelling the impact of megacities on local, regional and global tropospheric ozone and the deposition of nitrogen species

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the effects of ozone precursor emissions from megacities on present-day air quality using the global chemistry-climate model UM-UKCA (UK Met Office Unified Model coupled to the UK Chemistry and Aerosols model).
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Analysis of pollutants exchange between the Po Valley and the surrounding European region

TL;DR: In this article, emissions from the Po Valley region of Italy, the northern Mediterranean sea and the western Balkan peninsula have been investigated through the application of a chemical transport model and emissions sensitivity simulations have been performed to identify the Po valley footprint and to quantify its influence on the atmospheric composition.
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What are the effects of urban area on air quality?

Urban areas impact air quality regionally due to emissions, with urban canopy effects modulating pollutants like NO2, O3, and PM2.5, showing overestimation of urban emission impact without considering UCMF.