Abstract
Abstract. Here we report results of a detailed analysis of the urban and non-urban contributions to particulate matter (PM) concentrations and source contributions in five European cities, namely Schiedam (the Netherlands, NL), Lens (France, FR), Leipzig (Germany, DE), Zurich (Switzerland, CH) and Barcelona (Spain, ES). PM chemically speciated data from 12 European paired monitoring sites (one traffic, five urban, five regional and one continental background) were analysed by positive matrix factorisation (PMF) and Lenschow's approach to assign measured PM and source contributions to the different spatial levels. Five common sources were obtained at the 12 sites: sulfate-rich (SSA) and nitrate-rich (NSA) aerosols, road traffic (RT), mineral matter (MM), and aged sea salt (SS). These sources explained from 55 % to 88 % of PM mass at urban low-traffic-impact sites (UB) depending on the country. Three additional common sources were identified at a subset of sites/countries, namely biomass burning (BB) (FR, CH and DE), explaining an additional 9 %–13 % of PM mass, and residual oil combustion (V–Ni) and primary industrial (IND) (NL and ES), together explaining an additional 11 %–15 % of PM mass. In all countries, the majority of PM measured at UB sites was of a regional+continental (R+C) nature (64 %–74 %). The R+C PM increments due to anthropogenic emissions in DE, NL, CH, ES and FR represented around 66 %, 62 %, 52 %, 32 % and 23 %, respectively, of UB PM mass. Overall, the R+C PM increments due to natural and anthropogenic sources showed opposite seasonal profiles with the former increasing in summer and the latter increasing in winter, even if exceptions were observed. In ES, the anthropogenic R+C PM increment was higher in summer due to high contributions from regional SSA and V–Ni sources, both being mostly related to maritime shipping emissions at the Spanish sites. Conversely, in the other countries, higher anthropogenic R+C PM increments in winter were mostly due to high contributions from NSA and BB regional sources during the cold season. On annual average, the sources showing higher R+C increments were SSA (77 %–91 % of SSA source contribution at the urban level), NSA (51 %–94 %), MM (58 %–80 %), BB (42 %–78 %) and IND (91 % in NL). Other sources showing high R+C increments were photochemistry and coal combustion (97 %–99 %; identified only in DE). The highest regional SSA increment was observed in ES, especially in summer, and was related to ship emissions, enhanced photochemistry and peculiar meteorological patterns of the Western Mediterranean. The highest R+C and urban NSA increments were observed in NL and associated with high availability of precursors such as NOx and NH3. Conversely, on average, the sources showing higher local increments were RT (62 %–90 % at all sites) and V–Ni (65 %–80 % in ES and NL). The relationship between SSA and V–Ni indicated that the contribution of ship emissions to the local sulfate concentrations in NL has strongly decreased since 2007 thanks to the shift from high-sulfur- to low-sulfur-content fuel used by ships. An improvement of air quality in the five cities included here could be achieved by further reducing local (urban) emissions of PM, NOx and NH3 (from both traffic and non-traffic sources) but also SO2 and PM (from maritime ships and ports) and giving high relevance to non-urban contributions by further reducing emissions of SO2 (maritime shipping) and NH3 (agriculture) and those from industry, regional BB sources and coal combustion.
Highlights
In the last scientific assessment report from the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP) “Toward Cleaner Air”, it is stated that because non-urban sources are often major contributors to urban pollution, many cities will be unable to meet WHO guideline levels for air pollutants through local action alone
The paired sites selected for this study provided chemically speciated PM10 or PM2.5 data simultaneously measured at urban–traffic and regional–remote sites
The first one relates to the relative importance of local and remote air pollution sources. This aspect is the most directly connected to the policy expectations, but is raises a number of scientific challenges that we address in an innovative manner by differentiating primary and secondary particulate matter of different types
Summary
In the last scientific assessment report from the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP) “Toward Cleaner Air”, it is stated that because non-urban sources (i.e. regional+continental sources) are often major contributors to urban pollution, many cities will be unable to meet WHO guideline levels for air pollutants through local action alone. It is very important to estimate how much the local and regional+continental (R+C) sources (both natural and anthropogenic) contribute to urban pollution in order to design global strategies to reduce the levels of pollutants in European cities. The Task Force on Measurements and Modeling (TFMM-CLRTAP) initiated an assessment of the added value of paired urban and regional–remote sites in Europe. Experimental data from paired sites were used to allocate urban pollution to the different spatial scale sources. The periods presented here were comparable in Switzerland (CH, 2008–2009) and the Netherlands (NL, 2007–2008), whereas more recent data were used for Spain (ES, 2010–2014), Germany (DE, 2013–2014) and France (FR, 2013–2014)
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