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Gauging the air quality of New York: a non-linear Nexus between COVID-19 and nitrogen dioxide emission

Muddassar Sarfraz, Khurram Shehzad, Awais Farid

2020Air Quality Atmosphere & Health34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The primary objective of the study is to analyse the relationship between COVID-19 and nitrogen dioxide in New York City during the global pandemic. Notably, the study has investigated the direct influence of lockdown circumstances (due to COVID-19) and plunge in the population of New York on its environmental contamination. The study utilized the Non-Linear Autoregressive Distributed Lag (NARDL) model to ascertain the asymmetric impact of COVID-19 on the environmental quality of the USA. The results reveal that lockdown has played a significant role in the environmental quality of the USA. Notably, an escalation in the registered cases of COVID-19 has a meaningful and indirect relationship with environmental pollution in the UAS. Besides, as the lockdown state goes normal, it results in an explosion in the environmental pollution in the USA. Also, deaths due to COVID-19 substantively improve the environmental quality in the short-term period as well as in the long-term period.

Topics & Concepts

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Nexus (standard)Environmental qualityDistributed lagEnvironmental scienceAir quality indexPandemicPopulationSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Nitrogen dioxideTerm (time)Air pollution2019-20 coronavirus outbreakEnvironmental pollutionPollutionLagEnvironmental healthGeographyEnvironmental protectionEconometricsMeteorologyOutbreakEngineeringEconomicsMedicineEcologyComputer scienceBiologyQuantum mechanicsPathologyComputer networkPhysicsVirologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)Embedded systemDiseaseCOVID-19 impact on air qualityCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 Pandemic Impacts
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