Abstract

Concentrations of primary air pollutants are driven by emissions and weather patterns, which control their production and dispersion. The early months of the year see the celebratory use of fireworks, a week-long public holiday in China, but in 2020 overlapped in Hubei Province with lockdowns, some of > 70 days duration. The urban lockdowns enforced to mitigate the COVID-19 pandemic give a chance to explore the effect of rapid changes in societal activities on air pollution, with a public willing to leave views on social media and show a continuing concern about the return of pollution problems after COVID-19 restrictions are lifted. Fireworks typically give rise to sharp peaks in PM2.5 concentrations, though the magnitude of these peaks in both Wuhan and Beijing has decreased under tighter regulation in recent years, along with general reductions in pollutant emissions. Firework smoke is now most evident in smaller outlying cities and towns. The holiday effect, a reduction in pollutant concentrations when normal work activities are curtailed, is only apparent for NO2 in the holiday week in Wuhan (2015–2020), but not Beijing. Lockdown in Wuhan was characterised by decreases in NO2, along with more subtle changes in particulate matter and other pollutants. Ozone noticeably increases as there is less NO available for titration, but such change may not be widespread geographically. Beijing, where restrictions were less stringent, showed some improvement in air quality, though this is more difficult to detect, even within the 5th Ring Road.

Highlights

  • Shifts in the pattern of human behaviour can dramatically change local air quality

  • This study focuses on Beijing, China’s capital (Fig. 1) with a population of more than 21 million in the urban area covering some 4,144 km2 and Wuhan (Pop. 11 million; 2018) one of the nine National Central Cities of China (Fig. 1), along with three nearby a prefecture-level cities of Hubei Province: Huanggang (7.4 million; 2017), Ezhou (1.05 million; 2010) and Huangshi (2.4 million; 2010)

  • It shows that primary pollutants have typically been in decline in Beijing and Wuhan as they have for much of China (Cheng et al, 2018)

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Summary

Introduction

Shifts in the pattern of human behaviour can dramatically change local air quality. Daily or weekly cycles are the most obvious, but the effects of holidays are well known. Social and work patterns differ country to country Large events such as the Olympic Games or World Cup can change local policies and effectively alter environmental quality (Preuss, 2013). Significant events such as APEC meetings (Wang et al, 2018; Brimblecombe and Zong, 2019) or public celebrations such as the Victory Parade (Wang et al, 2017) may have a short term impact on air pollution by reducing urban emissions, while political demonstrations and protests can block traffic and affect air pollution at a local level (Brimblecombe and Ning, 2015; Brimblecombe, 2020a) and may see themselves linked to issues of emissions e.g., gilets jaunes (Kinniburgh, 2019).

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