Selected article for: "air pollution and fossil fuel"

Author: Lee, Munseob; Finerman, Rachel
Title: COVID-19, commuting flows, and air quality()
  • Cord-id: qysvytuo
  • Document date: 2021_9_4
  • ID: qysvytuo
    Snippet: Fossil-fuel burning transportation methods significantly contribute to air pollution. During the COVID-19 pandemic, South Korea experienced a 10-20% decline in commuting flows, even without government-mandated stay-at-home orders. This paper quantifies the impact that decreased commuting flows have on PM(2.5), PM(10), NO(2), CO, and SO(2), using municipality level commuting data. We find that a 1% decrease in commuting flows decreases air pollutants by 0.08-0.17%, after controlling for seasonali
    Document: Fossil-fuel burning transportation methods significantly contribute to air pollution. During the COVID-19 pandemic, South Korea experienced a 10-20% decline in commuting flows, even without government-mandated stay-at-home orders. This paper quantifies the impact that decreased commuting flows have on PM(2.5), PM(10), NO(2), CO, and SO(2), using municipality level commuting data. We find that a 1% decrease in commuting flows decreases air pollutants by 0.08-0.17%, after controlling for seasonality and time-varying local production. The effect was higher in regions with high initial pollution, and people recognized air quality improvements. These results emphasize the importance of encouraging cleaner transportation methods after the pandemic.

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