Environmental Research: Health (Jan 2024)

Low-cost system application for policy assessment: a case study from Berlin

  • Alexandre Caseiro,
  • Seán Schmitz,
  • Andreas Kerschbaumer,
  • Erika von Schneidemesser

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/2752-5309/ad56bb
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
p. 035008

Abstract

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Local policies are part of the toolbox available to decision makers to improve air quality but their effectiveness is underevaluated and underreported. We evaluate the impact of the pedestrianization of a street in the city centre of Berlin on the local air pollution. Nitrogen dioxide (NO _2 ) was measured on the street where the policy was implemented and on two parallel streets using low-cost sensor systems supported by periodic calibrations against reference-grade instruments and constrained by passive samplers. Further measurements of NO _2 were conducted with a reference-grade instrument mounted on a mobile platform. The concentrations were evaluated against the urban background (UB) to isolate the policy-related signal from natural fluctuations, long-term trends and the COVID-19 lockdown. Our analysis shows that the most likely result of the intervention is a reduced NO _2 concentrations to the level of the UB on weekdays for the pedestrian zone. Kerbside NO _2 concentrations exhibited substantial differences to the concentrations measured at lampposts highlighting the difficulty for such measurements to capture personal exposure. The results have implications for policy, showing that an intervention on the local traffic patterns can possibly be effective in improving local air quality.

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