Abstract

Abstract. Approximately 3 billion people worldwide cook with solid fuels, such as wood, charcoal, and agricultural residues. These fuels, also used for residential heating, are often combusted in inefficient devices, producing carbonaceous emissions. Between 2.6 and 3.8 million premature deaths occur as a result of exposure to fine particulate matter from the resulting household air pollution (Health Effects Institute, 2018a; World Health Organization, 2018). Household air pollution also contributes to ambient air pollution; the magnitude of this contribution is uncertain. Here, we simulate the distribution of the two major health-damaging outdoor air pollutants (PM2.5 and O3) using state-of-the-science emissions databases and atmospheric chemical transport models to estimate the impact of household combustion on ambient air quality in India. The present study focuses on New Delhi and the SOMAARTH Demographic, Development, and Environmental Surveillance Site (DDESS) in the Palwal District of Haryana, located about 80 km south of New Delhi. The DDESS covers an approximate population of 200 000 within 52 villages. The emissions inventory used in the present study was prepared based on a national inventory in India (Sharma et al., 2015, 2016), an updated residential sector inventory prepared at the University of Illinois, updated cookstove emissions factors from Fleming et al. (2018b), and PM2.5 speciation from cooking fires from Jayarathne et al. (2018). Simulation of regional air quality was carried out using the US Environmental Protection Agency Community Multiscale Air Quality modeling system (CMAQ) in conjunction with the Weather Research and Forecasting modeling system (WRF) to simulate the meteorological inputs for CMAQ, and the global chemical transport model GEOS-Chem to generate concentrations on the boundary of the computational domain. Comparisons between observed and simulated O3 and PM2.5 levels are carried out to assess overall airborne levels and to estimate the contribution of household cooking emissions. Observed and predicted ozone levels over New Delhi during September 2015, December 2015, and September 2016 routinely exceeded the 8 h Indian standard of 100 µg m−3, and, on occasion, exceeded 180 µg m−3. PM2.5 levels are predicted over the SOMAARTH headquarters (September 2015 and September 2016), Bajada Pahari (a village in the surveillance site; September 2015, December 2015, and September 2016), and New Delhi (September 2015, December 2015, and September 2016). The predicted fractional impact of residential emissions on anthropogenic PM2.5 levels varies from about 0.27 in SOMAARTH HQ and Bajada Pahari to about 0.10 in New Delhi. The predicted secondary organic portion of PM2.5 produced by household emissions ranges from 16 % to 80 %. Predicted levels of secondary organic PM2.5 during the periods studied at the four locations averaged about 30 µg m−3, representing approximately 30 % and 20 % of total PM2.5 levels in the rural and urban stations, respectively.

Highlights

  • Outdoor air pollution is widely recognized as a health risk, quantitative understanding remains uncertain on the degree to which household combustion contributes to unhealthy air

  • In a study related to the present one, Schnell et al (2018) used emission datasets developed for the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phases 5 (CMIP5) and 6 (CMIP6) to evaluate the impact on predicted PM2.5 over northern India, October– March 2015–2016, with special attention paid to the effect of meteorology of the region, including relative humidity, boundary layer depth, strength of the temperature inversion, and low-level wind speed

  • Bajada Pahari is shown in yellow, SOMAARTH HQ in green, West New Delhi in pink, and South New Delhi in blue

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Summary

Introduction

Outdoor air pollution is widely recognized as a health risk, quantitative understanding remains uncertain on the degree to which household combustion contributes to unhealthy air. In a study related to the present one, Schnell et al (2018) used emission datasets developed for the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phases 5 (CMIP5) and 6 (CMIP6) to evaluate the impact on predicted PM2.5 over northern India, October– March 2015–2016, with special attention paid to the effect of meteorology of the region, including relative humidity, boundary layer depth, strength of the temperature inversion, and low-level wind speed. The goal of the present work is to simulate the distribution of primary and secondary PM2.5 and O3 using recently updated emissions databases and atmospheric chemical transport models to obtain estimates of the total impact on ambient air quality attributable to household combustion. The present work is based on simulating the levels of both O3 and PM2.5 at the regional level based on recent emissions inventories using state-ofthe-science atmospheric chemical transport models

Nonresidential sectors emissions
Residential sector emissions
Atmospheric modeling
7–30 September 2015 7–31 December 2015
Surface observational data
WRF evaluation
Particulate matter
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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