Abstract

Beef cattle feedlots are major sources of criteria air pollutants in the United States. To aid stakeholders in air quality modeling, emissions factors for animal waste-producing facilities are under development by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). However, beef cattle feeding operations (feedlots) are not among facilities surveyed under the associated USEPA National Air Emissions Monitoring Study (NAEMS). Authors aim to supplement NAEMS through development and validation of particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5) emission factors from a previous sampling campaign of five large feedlots in the Southern High Plains of North America via USEPA's CALPUFF dispersion model. PM concentrations were higher overall during the warm season (March–August; PM10 = 692 ± 507, PM2.5 = 114 ± 110 μg/m3) relative to cool season (November–January; PM10 = 102 ± 105, PM2.5 = 12.2 ± 8.6 μg/m3), and overall median PM10 and PM2.5 emission factors were 48.2 (day = 33.8, night = 72.4) and 5.22 (day = 8.4, night = 3.1) mg/m2/hr, respectively. Validated emissions factors were then used to model diurnal peaks and long-range transport (100 km maximum extent). Peak concentrations were most frequently observed between 2000 and 0600 h (93.9%; mean 1-hr peak ± SD = 1119 ± 1240 μg/m3) for PM10 and 1600-0600 h (80.0%; mean 1-hr peak ± SD; 178 ± 174 μg/m3) for PM2.5. Four of five feedlots exceeded ≥1 primary PM National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) at receptors (2-m height) over a 5-km spatial extent during the modeling period (November 2010–August 2011). Moreover, present estimates of feedlot-derived inhalable PM represent human and environmental exposure pathways currently exempt from Clean Air Act monitoring and reporting standards, and spatial interpolation of federal air quality monitors cannot adequately characterize inhalable PM concentrations in non-metropolitan municipalities and unincorporated rural communities.

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