posted on 2022-03-08, 00:44authored byMartin J. Wolf, Daniel C. Esty, Honghyok Kim, Michelle L. Bell, Sam Brigham, Quinn Nortonsmith, Slaveya Zaharieva, Zachary A. Wendling, Alex de Sherbinin, John W. Emerson
Over six million
people die prematurely each year from exposure
to air pollution. Current air quality metrics insufficiently monitor
exposure to air pollutants. This gap hinders the ability of decisionmakers
to address the public health impacts of air pollution. To spur new
emissions control policies and ensure implemented solutions realize
meaningful gains in environmental health, we develop a framework of
public-health-focused air quality indicators that quantifies over
200 countries’ trends in exposure to particulate matter, ozone,
nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, and volatile organic
compounds. We couple population density to ground-level pollutant
concentrations to derive population-weighted exposure metrics that
quantify the pollutant levels experienced by the average resident
in each country. Our analyses demonstrate that most residents in 171
countries experience pollutant levels exceeding international health
guidelines. In addition, we find a negative correlation between temporal
trends in ozone and nitrogen oxide concentrations, whichwhen
qualitatively interpreted with a simple atmospheric chemistry box
modelcan help describe the apparent tradeoff between the mitigation
of these two pollutants on local scales. These novel indicators and
their applications enable regulators to identify their most critical
pollutant exposure trends and allow countries to track the performance
of their emission control policies over time.