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The Impact of Coronavirus Disease of 2019 (COVID-19) Lockdown Restrictions on the Criteria Pollutants

Version 2 2024-10-19, 10:42
Version 1 2023-02-15, 01:52
journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-19, 10:42 authored by P Verma, S Sisodiya, SK Banait, S Chowdhury, G Dwivedi, A Zare
Air pollution is accountable for various long-term and short-term respiratory diseases and even deaths. Air pollution is normally associated with a decreasing life expectancy. Governments have been implementing strategies to improve air quality. However, natural events have always played an important role in the concentration of air pollutants. In Australia, the lockdown period followed the Black Summer of 2019–2020 and coincided with the season of prescribed burns. This paper investigates the changes in the concentration of criteria pollutants such as particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide, ozone, and sulphur dioxide. The air quality data for the lockdown period in 2020 was compared with the pre-lockdown period in 2020 and with corresponding periods of previous years from 2016 to 2019. The results were also compared with the post-lockdown scenario of 2020 and 2021 to understand how the concentration levels changed due to behavioural changes and a lack of background events. The results revealed that the COVID-19 restrictions had some impact on the concentration of pollutants; however, the location of monitoring stations played an important role.

History

Journal

Processes

Volume

11

Article number

ARTN 296

Pagination

296-296

ISSN

2227-9717

eISSN

2227-9717

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

MDPI AG

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