Authors
Philippe Thunis, Bart Degraeuwe, Enrico Pisoni, Marco Trombetti, Emanuela Peduzzi, CA Belis, Julian Wilson, Alain Clappier, Elisabetta Vignati
Publication date
2018/8/1
Journal
Atmospheric environment
Volume
187
Pages
93-106
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Many European cities suffer from poor air quality and still exceed the European standards prescribed by the Air Quality Directive, and the guidelines recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO). This is especially the case for PM2.5, focus of this work. While international, national and local level actions to reduce air pollution have undoubtedly resulted in an overall improvement of the air quality over the years, there are still problems, which are localised in specific regions and many cities. A key issue is to determine at which scale to act in order to abate these remaining air pollution problems most effectively. Central to this, for cities, is a quantitative assessment of the different origins of air pollution (urban, regional, national and transboundary) to support the design of efficient, effective air quality plans, which are a legal obligation for countries and regions whenever exceedances occur.
The “Screening for …
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Scholar articles
P Thunis, B Degraeuwe, E Pisoni, M Trombetti… - Atmospheric environment, 2018