Atmosphere (Aug 2020)

Space-Borne Monitoring of NO<sub>x</sub> Emissions from Cement Kilns in South Korea

  • Hyun Cheol Kim,
  • Changhan Bae,
  • Minah Bae,
  • Okgil Kim,
  • Byeong-Uk Kim,
  • Chul Yoo,
  • Jinsoo Park,
  • Jinsoo Choi,
  • Jae-bum Lee,
  • Barry Lefer,
  • Ariel Stein,
  • Soontae Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos11080881
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
p. 881

Abstract

Read online

Nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions from the South Korean cement industry are investigated with remote-sensing measurements, surface observations, and in situ aircraft measurements. In the Yeongwol, Danyang, and Jecheon regions of central South Korea, six closely located cement factories produce 31 million tons of cement annually. Their impact on the regional environment has been a public-policy issue, but their pollutants have not been continuously monitored nor have emissions inventories been fully verified. Using a newly developed downscaling technique, remote-sensing analyses show that Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) NO2 column densities over the cement kilns have more than twice the modeled concentrations, indicating that the kilns are one of the most dominant NOx emission point sources in South Korea. Observed NOx emissions are stronger in the spring, suggesting that these sources play an important role in the formation of surface ozone and secondary particulate matter. These emissions also slightly increased in recent years, even while most major South Korean cities posted a declining trend in NOx emissions. Photochemical models (during May to July 2015) demonstrate that emissions from the South Korean cement industry have significant environmental impacts, both on surface ozone (up to approximately 4 ppb) and PM2.5 (up to approximately 2 µg/m3).

Keywords