T. T. Htwe, S. Thepanondh, S. Kwonpongsagoon, C. Chompunth, K. Jindamanee
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{"title":"Social restriction effects on air pollution: How the PM2.5 concentration changed with lockdown management of COVID-19 pandemic control in Bangkok Thailand","authors":"T. T. Htwe, S. Thepanondh, S. Kwonpongsagoon, C. Chompunth, K. Jindamanee","doi":"10.14456/ea.2021.25","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Under rapid proceeding of COVID-19 pandemic, Thailand government announced lockdown and social restriction in March 2020. With the frustration of pandemic, anthropogenic etiology of air pollution was beneficially assessed on other hands. The study aims at exploring how PM2.5 concentration changed with lockdown management and social restriction as part of COVID-19 control in the Bangkok Metropolitan Region, Thailand. There was PM2.5 concentration reduction of roadside (18.6%) and ambient (9.2%) in COVID-19 lockdown period than the same months of previous consecutive year. Moreover, this study showed a clear decline of PM2.5 during lockdown in both rush and non-rush hours except one roadside area which has a non-significant rising PM2.5 because of trucks activities in some area. Additionally, the probable high concentration during the lockdowns period occurred at calm wind speed, mostly from the south direction, particularly in roadside area indicating the traffic source of PM2.5 in the Conditional Bivariate Probability Function (CBPF) plot which estimate probable direction and source of air pollutant. Although PM2.5 is significantly reduced in the lockdown period, it is still above 66% (33 microgram per cubic meter) of the Thailand standard in CBPF analysis. No specific minimum level of PM2.5 is safe for health. However, it highlights monitoring emission sources and encouraging the community to make concerns about their daily contributing activities of air pollution. © 2021, Thai Society of Higher Eduation Institutes on Environment. All rights reserved.","PeriodicalId":39663,"journal":{"name":"EnvironmentAsia","volume":"14 1","pages":"80-90"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"EnvironmentAsia","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.14456/ea.2021.25","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Environmental Science","Score":null,"Total":0}
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社会限制对空气污染的影响:泰国曼谷新冠肺炎疫情防控的封锁管理下PM2.5浓度的变化
随着新冠肺炎疫情的迅速发展,泰国政府于2020年3月宣布了封锁和社会限制。随着大流行的挫折,空气污染的人为病因学在另一方面得到了有益的评估。该研究旨在探索泰国曼谷大都市区作为新冠肺炎控制的一部分,在封锁管理和社会限制下PM2.5浓度的变化。新冠肺炎封城期间,路边PM2.5浓度(18.6%)和环境PM2.5浓度(9.2%)均比上年同期下降。此外,本研究显示,在高峰和非高峰时段,除了一个路边区域由于卡车活动而PM2.5上升不显著外,封锁期间PM2.5明显下降。此外,封锁期间可能的高浓度发生在平静风速下,主要来自南向,特别是在路边区域,这是估计空气污染物可能方向和来源的条件二元概率函数(CBPF)图中指示PM2.5交通源的区域。虽然PM2.5在封锁期间明显减少,但在CBPF分析中仍高于泰国标准的66%(33微克/立方米)。没有具体的PM2.5最低水平对健康安全。然而,该计划强调监察排放源,并鼓励市民关注其日常造成空气污染的活动。©2021,泰国高等教育学院环境学会。版权所有。
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