Impact of Trash Burning on Air Quality in Mexico City
- Publication date
- 2012
- Publisher
Abstract
Air pollution experienced by expanding urban areas is responsible
for serious health effects and death for millions of people every
year. Trash burning is a common disposal method in poor areas, yet
it is uncontrolled in many countries, and its contribution to air
pollution is unclear due to uncertainties in its emissions. Here we
develop a new trash burning emission inventory for Mexico City based
on inverse socioeconomic levels and recently measured emission factors,
and apply a chemistry-transport model to analyze the effects on pollutant
concentrations. Trash burning is estimated to emit 25 tons of primary
organic aerosols (POA) per day, which is comparable to fossil fuel
POA emissions in Mexico City, and causes an increase in average organic
aerosol concentrations of ∼0.3 μg m<sup>–3</sup> downtown and up to 2 μg m<sup>–3</sup> in highly populated
suburbs near the sources of emission. An evaluation using submicrometer
antimony suggests that our emission estimates are reasonable. Mitigation
of trash burning could reduce the levels of organic aerosols by 2–40%
and those of PM<sub>2.5</sub> by 1–15% over the metropolitan
area. The trash burning contributions to carbon monoxide, nitrogen
oxides, and volatile organic compounds were found to be very small
(<3%), and consequently the contributions to secondary nitrate,
sulfate, and secondary organic aerosols are also very small