Back to Search Start Over

Multi-Year (2013-2016) PM2.5 Wildfire Pollution Exposure over North America as Determined from Operational Air Quality Forecasts.

Authors :
Munoz-Alpizar, Rodrigo
Pavlovic, Radenko
Moran, Michael D.
Chen, Jack
Gravel, Sylvie
Henderson, Sarah B.
Ménard, Sylvain
Racine, Jacinthe
Duhamel, Annie
Gilbert, Samuel
Beaulieu, Paul-André
Landry, Hugo
Davignon, Didier
Cousineau, Sophie
Bouchet, Véronique
Source :
Atmosphere. Sep2017, Vol. 8 Issue 9, p179. 31p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

FireWork is an on-line, one-way coupled meteorology-chemistry model based on near-real-time wildfire emissions. It was developed by Environment and Climate Change Canada to deliver operational real-time forecasts of biomass-burning pollutants, in particular fine particulate matter (PM2.5), over North America. Such forecasts provide guidance for early air quality alerts that could reduce air pollution exposure and protect human health. A multi-year (2013-2016) analysis of FireWork forecasts over a five-month period (May to September) was conducted. This work used an archive of FireWork outputs to quantify wildfire contributions to total PM2.5 surface concentrations across North America. Different concentration thresholds (0.2 to 28 μg/m³) and averaging periods (24 h to five months) were considered. Analysis suggested that, on average over the fire season, 76% of Canadians and 69% of Americans were affected by seasonal wildfire-related PM2.5 concentrations above 0.2 μg/m³. These effects were particularly pronounced in July and August. Futhermore, the analysis showed that fire emissions contributed more than 1 μg/m³ of daily average PM2.5 concentrations on more than 30% of days in the western USA and northwestern Canada during the fire season. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20734433
Volume :
8
Issue :
9
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Atmosphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
125301542
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos8090179