The contradiction between the regional
imbalance and an one-size-fits-all
policy is one of the biggest challenges in current air pollution control
in China. With the recent implementation of first-level public health
emergency response (FLPHER) in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in
China (a total of 77 041 confirmed cases by February 22, 2020),
human activities were extremely decreased nationwide and almost all
economic activities were suspended. Here, we show that this scenario
represents an unprecedented “base period” to probe the
short-term emission control effect of air pollution at a city level.
We quantify the FLPHER-induced changes of NO2, SO2, PM2.5, and PM10 levels in 174 cities in China.
A machine learning prediction model for air pollution is established
by coupling a generalized additive model, random effects meta-analysis,
and weather research and forecasting model with chemistry analysis.
The short-term control effect under the current energy structure in
each city is estimated by comparing the predicted and observed results
during the FLPHER period. We found that the short-term emission control
effect ranges within 53.0%–98.3% for all cities, and southern
cities show a significantly stronger effect than northern cities (P < 0.01). Compared with megacities, small–medium
cities show a similar control effect on NO2 and SO2 but a larger effect on PM2.5 and PM10.
Anthropogenic magnetite nanoparticles have been identified to present in human brain and circulatory system, which are potentially linked with the incidence of neurodegenerative and cardiovascular diseases. Specifically, magnetite nanoparticles originated...
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