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Impact of U.S. Oil and Natural Gas Emission Increases on Surface Ozone Is Most Pronounced in the Central United States

Andrea Pozzer, Martin G. Schultz, Detlev Helmig

2020Environmental Science & Technology48 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

stemming from U.S. oil and natural gas (O&NG) sources during 2009-2014 were then added to the model, and a set of sensitivity runs was conducted for assessing the influence of the increased emissions on summer surface ozone levels. For the year 2014, the added O&NG emissions are predicted to affect surface ozone across a large geographical scale in the United States. These emissions are responsible for an increased number of days when the averaged 8-h ozone values exceed 70 ppb, with the highest sensitivity being in the central and midwestern United States, where most of the O&NG growth has occurred. These findings demonstrate that O&NG emissions significantly affect the air quality across most of the United States, can regionally offset reductions of ozone precursor emissions made in other sectors, and can have a determining influence on a region's ability to meet National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) obligations for ozone.

Topics & Concepts

OzoneNOxAir quality indexEnvironmental scienceEmission inventoryAtmospheric sciencesEnvironmental chemistryChemistryMeteorologyGeographyGeologyCombustionOrganic chemistryAtmospheric chemistry and aerosolsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsAir Quality and Health Impacts
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