The objective of this deliverable is to produce a quantitative assessment of current climate and air quality conditions in iSCAPE cities (“baseline scenario”). This fulfils the objective of providing a synthesis of climatic conditions and air quality pre-intervention of PCSs in each city. Mean meteorological conditions are obtained by calculating the annual average from hourly recordings over 5 years for wind speed and wind direction, and 10 years of hourly air temperature and daily precipitation. All the considered monitoring stations in each city belong to the governmental agencies and, therefore, they follow the acquisition and dissemination standard of the European legislation. Mean conditions are represented with graphs and histograms to provide an immediate snapshot of climatic conditions and to serve as background for the interpretation of the distribution of PM10, PM2.5, NO2 or/and NOX as well as ozone. Those compounds are presented as concentration maps with high resolution maps generated for each site. The combination of meteorological data and concentration maps furnish a baseline for the PCS interventions at each site. The year of reference is different for each site, reflecting what is currently available at our best knowledge. Mutual results show pollution concentrations are directly associated to the presence of anthropogenic activities and filtered by atmospheric circulation. In Bologna, Guildford and Vantaa it is evident that the primary contribution to pollution distribution is at roads and junctions, which is also valid for Bottrop Motorways junction stands out as one of the most polluted points and influences pollutant distributions. Dublin and Vantaa perceive both wet (precipitations) and dry (winds) pollutant removal, while low pollutant concentrations in Hasselt are solely a consequence of wet removal. This report also provides novel information regarding heat waves and urban heat island (UHI) for the two larger sites within iSCAPE i.e. Dublin and Bologna. Those two large cities are affected as noted in iSCAPE D1.4 by UHI phenomenon which during summer may exacerbate climatic conditions when a heat wave is occurring. To better tailor iSCAPE PCS interventions it is crucial to consider the behavior of air temperature distribution under heat wave conditions. To this end novel numerical simulations are validated and used to illustrate the “expected” spatial distribution of air temperature within the city and relative UHI quantified. Despite Dublin being much larger than Bologna, the effect of building density and built thermal properties is such that Bologna’s UHI is much larger and show stronger diurnal variation. This indicates clearly that southern European cities may consider larger employment of PCSs to mitigate both air quality and climate.

Assessment of air quality and microclimate in EU selected cities pre-infrastructural solutions

Di Sabatino S.
;
Barbano F.;Pulvirenti B.
2017

Abstract

The objective of this deliverable is to produce a quantitative assessment of current climate and air quality conditions in iSCAPE cities (“baseline scenario”). This fulfils the objective of providing a synthesis of climatic conditions and air quality pre-intervention of PCSs in each city. Mean meteorological conditions are obtained by calculating the annual average from hourly recordings over 5 years for wind speed and wind direction, and 10 years of hourly air temperature and daily precipitation. All the considered monitoring stations in each city belong to the governmental agencies and, therefore, they follow the acquisition and dissemination standard of the European legislation. Mean conditions are represented with graphs and histograms to provide an immediate snapshot of climatic conditions and to serve as background for the interpretation of the distribution of PM10, PM2.5, NO2 or/and NOX as well as ozone. Those compounds are presented as concentration maps with high resolution maps generated for each site. The combination of meteorological data and concentration maps furnish a baseline for the PCS interventions at each site. The year of reference is different for each site, reflecting what is currently available at our best knowledge. Mutual results show pollution concentrations are directly associated to the presence of anthropogenic activities and filtered by atmospheric circulation. In Bologna, Guildford and Vantaa it is evident that the primary contribution to pollution distribution is at roads and junctions, which is also valid for Bottrop Motorways junction stands out as one of the most polluted points and influences pollutant distributions. Dublin and Vantaa perceive both wet (precipitations) and dry (winds) pollutant removal, while low pollutant concentrations in Hasselt are solely a consequence of wet removal. This report also provides novel information regarding heat waves and urban heat island (UHI) for the two larger sites within iSCAPE i.e. Dublin and Bologna. Those two large cities are affected as noted in iSCAPE D1.4 by UHI phenomenon which during summer may exacerbate climatic conditions when a heat wave is occurring. To better tailor iSCAPE PCS interventions it is crucial to consider the behavior of air temperature distribution under heat wave conditions. To this end novel numerical simulations are validated and used to illustrate the “expected” spatial distribution of air temperature within the city and relative UHI quantified. Despite Dublin being much larger than Bologna, the effect of building density and built thermal properties is such that Bologna’s UHI is much larger and show stronger diurnal variation. This indicates clearly that southern European cities may consider larger employment of PCSs to mitigate both air quality and climate.
2017
Di Sabatino S., Barbano F., Brunetti A.F., Valmassoi A., Pulvirenti B.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/727915
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