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Supporting the improvement of air quality management practices: The “FAIRMODE pilot” activity

TitleSupporting the improvement of air quality management practices: The “FAIRMODE pilot” activity
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsPisoni, E., Guerreiro C., Lopez-Aparicio S., Guevara M., Tarrason L., Janssen S., Thunis P., Pfäfflin F., Piersanti Antonio, Briganti Gino, Cappelletti Andrea, D'Elia Ilaria, Mircea Mihaela, Villani Maria Gabriella, Vitali Lina, Matavž L., Rus M., Žabkar R., Kauhaniemi M., Karppinen A., Kousa A., Väkevä O., Eneroth K., Stortini M., Delaney K., Struzewska J., Durka P., Kaminski J.W., Krmpotic S., Vidic S., Belavic M., Brzoja D., Milic V., Assimakopoulos V.D., Fameli K.M., Polimerova T., Stoyneva E., Hristova Y., Sokolovski E., and Cuvelier C.
JournalJournal of Environmental Management
Volume245
Pagination122-130
ISSN03014797
KeywordsAir quality, article, atmospheric modeling, emission inventory, environmental management, environmental planning, future prospect, human, scenario analysis, source apportionment
Abstract

This paper presents the first outcomes of the “FAIRMODE pilot” activity, aiming at improving the way in which air quality models are used in the frame of the European “Air Quality Directive”. Member States may use modelling, combined with measurements, to “assess” current levels of air quality and estimate future air quality under different scenarios. In case of current and potential exceedances of the Directive limit values, it is also requested that they “plan” and implement emission reductions measures to avoid future exceedances. In both “assessment” and “planning”, air quality models can and should be used; but to do so, the used modelling chain has to be fit-for-purpose and properly checked and verified. FAIRMODE has developed in the recent years a suite of methodologies and tools to check if emission inventories, model performance, source apportionment techniques and planning activities are fit-for-purpose. Within the “FAIRMODE pilot”, these tools are used and tested by regional/local authorities, with the two-fold objective of improving management practices at regional/local scale, and providing valuable feedback to the FAIRMODE community. Results and lessons learnt from this activity are presented in this paper, as a showcase that can potentially benefit other authorities in charge of air quality assessment and planning. © 2019 The Authors

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85066436692&doi=10.1016%2fj.jenvman.2019.04.118&partnerID=40&md5=a9e53f1aaace81122871a20726a582e2
DOI10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.04.118
Citation KeyPisoni2019122