Abstract

Rapid urbanization has produced a huge amount of construction waste. The operations and consequences of construction and demolition can lead to windblown dust problems, profoundly affecting the living environment of residents. Fortunately, dust-proof nets have been used in construction sites to reduce and prevent pollution by fine particles such as dust, so it is important to monitor and evaluate their efficacy. In this study, Earth observation techniques were used for the extraction and monitoring of solid waste and dust-proof nets. In order to fully perceive the validity and necessity of dust-proof nets for urban air health, we conducted a case study in Zhengzhou, China. We explored the potential of multispectral remote sensing available for monitoring urban construction waste and proposed a multi-layer classification method to identify construction waste and dust-proof nets based on Landsat-8 OLI and Sentinel-2 MSI data, with an average identification accuracy and Kappa coefficient of 96.27% and 0.93 for construction waste in the study area from 2015 to 2020, respectively. In addition, our study revealed the driving factors and impact of temporal variations in regional construction waste areas and dust-proof nets coverage. The results indicate the classification can track municipal solid waste management and changes in air pollutant concentrations and is useful for achieving SDG 11.6 (reduce the adverse per capita environmental impact of cities, including by paying special attention to air quality and municipal and other waste management). This study has the potential to monitor construction waste and dust-proof nets, paving the way for better urban environmental governance and surveillance actions in the future, especially involving big data.

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