Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Source Contributions to Ambient Fine Particulate Matter for Canada.

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY(2019)

Cited 52|Views16
No score
Abstract
Understanding the sectoral contribution of emissions to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) offers information for air quality management, and for investigation of association with health outcomes. This study evaluates the contribution of different emission sectors to PM2.5 in 2013 for Canada using the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model, downscaled with satellite-based PM2.5. Despite the low population-weighted PM2.5 concentrations of 5.5 mu g m(-3) across Canada, we find that over 70% of population-weighted PM2.5 originates from Canadian sources followed by 30% from the contiguous United States. The three leading sectoral contributors to population-weighted PM2.5 over Canada are wildfires with 1.0 mu g m(-3) (17%), transportation with 0.96 mu g m(-3) (16%), and residential combustion with 0.91 mu g m(-3) (15%). The relative contribution to population-weighted PM2.5 of different sectors varies regionally with residential combustion as the leading contributor in Central Canada (19%), while wildfires dominate over Northern Canada (59%), Atlantic Canada (34%), and Western Canada (18%). The contribution from U.S. sources is larger over Central Canada (33%) than over Western Canada (17%), Atlantic Canada (17%), and Northern Canada (<2%). Sectoral trend analysis showed that the contribution from anthropogenic sources to population-weighted PM2.5 decreased from 7.1 mu g m(-3) to 3.4 mu g m(-3) over the past two decades.
More
Translated text
Key words
ambient fine particulate matter,contributions,canada
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined