Data in Brief (Apr 2023)

2002–2017 anthropogenic emissions data for air quality modeling over the United States

  • Kristen M. Foley,
  • George A. Pouliot,
  • Alison Eyth,
  • Michael F. Aldridge,
  • Christine Allen,
  • K. Wyat Appel,
  • Jesse O. Bash,
  • Megan Beardsley,
  • James Beidler,
  • David Choi,
  • Caroline Farkas,
  • Robert C. Gilliam,
  • Janice Godfrey,
  • Barron H. Henderson,
  • Christian Hogrefe,
  • Shannon N. Koplitz,
  • Rich Mason,
  • Rohit Mathur,
  • Chris Misenis,
  • Norm Possiel,
  • Havala O.T. Pye,
  • Lara Reynolds,
  • Matthew Roark,
  • Sarah Roberts,
  • Donna B. Schwede,
  • Karl M. Seltzer,
  • Darrell Sonntag,
  • Kevin Talgo,
  • Claudia Toro,
  • Jeff Vukovich,
  • Jia Xing,
  • Elizabeth Adams

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 47
p. 109022

Abstract

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The United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) has developed a set of annual North American emissions data for multiple air pollutants across 18 broad source categories for 2002 through 2017. The sixteen new annual emissions inventories were developed using consistent input data and methods across all years. When a consistent method or tool was not available for a source category, emissions were estimated by scaling data from the EPA's 2017 National Emissions Inventory with scaling factors based on activity data and/or emissions control information. The emissions datasets are designed to support regional air quality modeling for a wide variety of human health and ecological applications. The data were developed to support simulations of the EPA's Community Multiscale Air Quality model but can also be used by other regional scale air quality models. The emissions data are one component of EPA's Air Quality Time Series Project which also includes air quality modeling inputs (meteorology, initial conditions, boundary conditions) and outputs (e.g., ozone, PM2.5 and constituent species, wet and dry deposition) for the Conterminous US at a 12 km horizontal grid spacing.

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