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Air pollution halves during first day of UK coronavirus lockdown

Air pollution halved in some UK cities on the first day of the lockdown to tackle the coronavirus pandemic.

Air Quality News analysed Department for Energy, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) monitoring data for nitrogen dioxide (NO2) in London, Leeds, Manchester, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Liverpool, Bristol and Newcastle, comparing yesterday (March 24) with the same day last year (March 26).

Edinburgh saw the largest drop in concentrations from a daily average of  74µg/m3 im 2019, to 28µg/m3 yesterday, as regular commuters worked from home and only essential workers were permitted to travel into the Scottish capital to do their job.

London Westminster also saw a massive decrease in NO2 emissions, from 58µg/m3 in 2019 to 30µg/m3 yesterday.

Despite the fall in transport emissions, Transport for London (TfL) has relaxed penalties around air pollution. From Monday it suspended London’s Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) until further notice to make it easier for key workers to travel to work and for supermarkets to receive stock.

Whilst Liverpool and Leeds both saw sizeable drops in NO2 levels, other cities saw a more modest reduction.

Defra’s monitor at Manchester Picadilly recorded a daily NO2 level of 37µg/m3, down from 44µg/m3 last year, whereas Bristol fell from  35µg/m3 to 30µg/m3.

The hourly data showed that rush hour was still a busy for time for commuters despite the lockdown. Manchester peaked at a significant 77µg/m3 whereas Birmingham topped out at 57µg/m3.

Both Oxford and Birmingham have this week announced delays to their respective Zero Emission Zone (ZEZ) and Clean Air Zone (CAZ) due to the pandemic.

The mean averages for each city studied are below, courtesy of Defra.

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Ben
Ben
4 years ago

At 9 AM yesterday 2 birds flew past my window. At 9 AM this morning only one bird flew past. Perhaps we can explain this halving in the bird population* in terms of CV19? Some acknowledgement of normal (pre-CV19) temporal variation might be helpful. [*at this particular time and place]

David Edwards
David Edwards
4 years ago

The biggest polluter by a mile is air traffic. One flight in an aircraft is equivalent to a whole years driving.

Akin
Akin
4 years ago
Reply to  David Edwards

Not true

Louis T Rogerson
Louis T Rogerson
4 years ago

The data is a bit clunky to read with the older date being to the right.

Jes Sig Andersen
Jes Sig Andersen
4 years ago

Great new 🙂 So after all, trafic is to be held accountable as the main contributor, I mean, now paople have all the time in the world to sit at home and roar up their stoves. Otherwise the figures should’ve risen dramatically.

L H
L H
4 years ago

This is a table for NO2 not PM’s. Stoves are responsible for particulate matter (PM) not NO2.

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