Abstract

COVID-19 related restrictions lowered particulate matter and trace gas concentrations across cities around the world, providing a natural opportunity to study effects of anthropogenic activities on emissions of air pollutants. In this paper, the impact of sudden suspension of human activities on air pollution was analyzed by studying the change in satellite retrieved NO2 concentrations and top-down NOx emission over the urban and rural areas around Delhi. NO2 was chosen for being the most indicative of emission intensity due to its short lifetime of the order of a few hours in the planetary boundary layer. We present a robust temporal comparison of Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) retrieved NO2 column density during the lockdown with the counterfactual baseline concentrations, extrapolated from the long-term trend and seasonal cycle components of NO2 using observations during 2015 to 2019. NO2 concentration in the urban area of Delhi experienced an anomalous relative change ranging from 60.0% decline during the Phase 1 of lockdown (March 25–April 13, 2020) to 3.4% during the post-lockdown Phase 5. In contrast, we find no substantial reduction in NO2 concentrations over the rural areas. To segregate the impact of the lockdown from the meteorology, weekly top-down NOx emissions were estimated from high-resolution TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) retrieved NO2 by accounting for horizontal advection derived from the steady state continuity equation. NOx emissions from urban Delhi and power plants exhibited a mean decline of 72.2% and 53.4% respectively in Phase 1 compared to the pre-lockdown business-as-usual phase. Emission estimates over urban areas and power-plants showed a good correlation with activity reports, suggesting the applicability of this approach for studying emission changes. A higher anomaly in emission estimates suggests that comparison of only concentration change, without accounting for the dynamical and photochemical conditions, may mislead evaluation of lockdown impact. Our results shall also have a broader impact for optimizing bottom-up emission inventories.

Highlights

  • COVID-19 related restrictions lowered particulate matter and trace gas concentrations across cities around the world, providing a natural opportunity to study effects of anthropogenic activities on emissions of air pollutants

  • As ­NO2 is less prone to long-range transport owing to its short life-time (2–7 h), its concentration changes during the COVID-19 lockdowns are being probed to obtain a clear estimation of the regional impact of local policy actions

  • The natural experiment induced by COVID-19 lockdown was used to assess the impact of lockdown on NOx concentration and anthropogenic emissions in a region in Northern India around Delhi

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Summary

Introduction

COVID-19 related restrictions lowered particulate matter and trace gas concentrations across cities around the world, providing a natural opportunity to study effects of anthropogenic activities on emissions of air pollutants. The impact of sudden suspension of human activities on air pollution was analyzed by studying the change in satellite retrieved ­NO2 concentrations and topdown NOx emission over the urban and rural areas around Delhi. One question of interest is the reduction in NOx concentrations which is attributable to the COVID-19 lockdown ­restrictions[4,10,11,16] This is challenging because the short-term ­NO2 concentrations are regulated through the anthropogenic emissions and non-linearly through meteorology, atmospheric chemistry and soil NOx emission. A handful of studies have systematically disentangled the impact of lockdown on the NOx emissions from the concentrations by considering the effect of wind fields on pollutant transport, for example by simulating wind ­trajectories[19,20,21], employing machine learning-based deweathering t­echnique[22], applying chemical transport model (CTM) to determine seasonal and meteorological e­ ffects[23]

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