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Spring Festival and COVID‐19 Lockdown: Disentangling PM Sources in Major Chinese Cities

Spring Festival and COVID‐19 Lockdown: Disentangling PM Sources in Major Chinese Cities
AbstractResponding to the 2020 COVID‐19 outbreak, China imposed an unprecedented lockdown producing reductions in air pollutant emissions. However, the lockdown driven air pollution changes have not been fully quantified. We applied machine learning to quantify the effects of meteorology on surface air quality data in 31 major Chinese cities. The meteorologically normalized NO2, O3, and PM2.5 concentrations changed by −29.5%, +31.2%, and −7.0%, respectively, after the lockdown began. However, part of this effect was also associated with emission changes due to the Chinese Spring Festival, which led to ∼14.1% decrease in NO2, ∼6.6% increase in O3 and a mixed effect on PM2.5 in the studied cities that largely resulted from festival associated fireworks. After decoupling the weather and Spring Festival effects, changes in air quality attributable to the lockdown were much smaller: −15.4%, +24.6%, and −9.7% for NO2, O3, and PM2.5, respectively.
- University of Birmingham United Kingdom
- University of Medicine and Health Sciences Saint Kitts and Nevis
- University of Medicine and Health Sciences Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Health Research United States
- Nankai University China (People's Republic of)
source, COVID-19, air quality, machine learning, Research Letter, meteorological normalization, spring festival
source, COVID-19, air quality, machine learning, Research Letter, meteorological normalization, spring festival
35 Research products, page 1 of 4
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