Abstract

The outbreak of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in China in January 2020 prompted substantial control measures including social distancing measures, suspension of public transport and industry, and widespread cordon sanitaires (‘lockdowns’), that have led to a decrease in industrial activity and air pollution emissions over a prolonged period. We use a 5 year dataset from China’s air quality monitoring network to assess the impact of control measures on air pollution. Pollutant concentration time series are decomposed to account for the inter-annual trend, seasonal cycles and the effect of Lunar New Year, which coincided with the COVID-19 outbreak. Over 2015–2019, there were significant negative trends in particulate matter (PM2.5, −6% yr−1) and sulphur dioxide (SO2, −12% yr−1) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2, −2.2% yr−1) whereas there were positive trends in ozone (O3, + 2.8% yr−1). We quantify the change in air quality during the LNY holiday week, during which pollutant concentrations increase on LNY’s day, followed by reduced concentrations in the rest of the week. After accounting for interannual trends and LNY we find NO2 and PM concentrations were significantly lower during the lockdown period than would be expected, but there were no significant impacts on O3. Largest reductions occurred in NO2, with concentrations 27.0% lower on average across China, during the lockdown. Average concentrations of PM2.5 and PM10 across China were respectively 10.5% and 21.4% lower during the lockdown period. The largest reductions were in Hubei province, where NO2 concentrations were 50.5% lower than expected during the lockdown. Concentrations of affected pollutants returned to expected levels during April, after control measures were relaxed.

Highlights

  • The outbreak of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID19) began in the megacity of Wuhan in central China, with cases first being reported on December 27, 2019

  • We show that significant trends have continued across much of China

  • We show that quantifying the impact of the lock down requires careful consideration of interacting factors, including interannual trends, seasonal cycle and the Lunar New Year (LNY)

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Summary

Introduction

The outbreak of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID19) began in the megacity of Wuhan (population 11 million) in central China, with cases first being reported on December 27, 2019. Media reports of an unknown pneumonia outbreak began to appear on December 31, with the outbreak officially being reported to the World Health Organisation (WHO) on the same day (WHO 2020). The cause of the disease was confirmed as a novel coronavirus on January 7 2020 (Wu and Mcgoogan 2020). The Chinese government quickly implemented control measures, such as isolation, quarantine and social distancing. Dramatic actions to control the disease were taken, as entire cities were quarantined across China. This began with Wuhan being ‘locked-down’ on January

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