| Literature DB >> 35622639 |
Turki M Habeebullah1, Said Munir2, Jahan Zeb1, Essam A Morsy1.
Abstract
To reduce the spread of COVID-19, lockdowns were implemented in almost every single country in the world including Saudi Arabia. In this paper, the effect of COVID-19 lockdown on O3, NO2, and PM10 in Makkah was analysed using air quality and meteorology data from five sites. Two approaches were employed: (a) comparing raw measured concentrations for the lockdown period in 2019 and 2020; and (b) comparing weather-corrected concentrations estimated by the machine learning approach with observed concentrations during the lockdown period. According to the first approach, the average levels of PM10 and NO2 decreased by 12% and 58.66%, respectively, whereas the levels of O3 increased by 68.67%. According to the second approach, O3 levels increased by 21.96%, while the levels of NO2 and PM10 decreased by 13.40% and 9.66%, respectively. The machine learning approach after removing the effect of changes in weather conditions demonstrated relatively less reductions in the levels of NO2 and PM10 and a smaller increase in the levels of O3. This showed the importance of adjusting air pollutant levels for meteorological conditions. O3 levels increased due to its inverse correlation with NO2, which decreased during the lockdown period.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 lockdown; Makkah; NO2; O3; PM10; air quality; intervention; machine learning
Year: 2022 PMID: 35622639 PMCID: PMC9144150 DOI: 10.3390/toxics10050225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxics ISSN: 2305-6304
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the processes, methodology, and outcomes.
Figure 2Map showing the location of monitoring sites in Makkah: Umrah, Otibiah, Aziziah, Shawqiah, and Haram. No data were available from Shara’a for 2020; therefore, comparison was not made for this site. The lower panel shows the location of the Haram site inside the Holy Mosque and the equipment (Environment SA) used for collecting the data.
Percent difference (year 2020–year 2019) in the concentrations of pollutants at different monitoring sites. The negative sign shows a decrease, and the positive sign shows an increase in pollutant concentrations.
| Site | Year | O3 (µg/m3) | NO2 (µg/m3) | PM10 (µg/m3) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aziziah | 2019 | 22.34 | 31.15 (24.4) | 110.58 |
| 2020 | 40.98 | 22.98 (21.4) | 105.68 | |
| Difference | 18.64 | −8.17 (−3) | −4.36 | |
| % Difference | 83.44 | −35.55 (−14.04) | −3.95 | |
| Otibiah | 2019 | 42.74 | 24.46 | 123.80 |
| 2020 | 51.75 | 20.70 | 109.19 | |
| Difference | 8.03 | −3.76 | −14.61 | |
| % Difference | 18.78 | −15.37 | −11.80 | |
| Shawqiah | 2019 | 15.90 | 47.66 | 125.13 |
| 2020 | 39.00 | NA | 120.42 | |
| Difference | 23.10 | NA | −4.71 | |
| % Difference | 145 | NA | −3.71 | |
| Umrah | 2019 | 55.23 | 14.80 | 118.11 |
| 2020 | 48.78 | 13.83 | 117.4 | |
| Difference | −6.45 | −0.82 | −0.40 | |
| % Difference | −11.68 | −5.54 | −0.34 | |
| Haram | 2019 | 25.52 | 34.98 | 91.10 |
| 2020 | 53.90 | 34.20 | 98.15 | |
| Difference | 27.52 | −0.78 | 7.05 | |
| % Difference | 107.82 | −2.2 | 7.74 |
Figure 3Comparing weekly and diurnal cycles of pollutant levels in 2019 and 2020 for the lockdown period at the Aziziah site in Makkah.
Comparison of fitted and cross-validated models for predicting PM10, NO2, and O3 provided only for two sites i.e., the Aziziah and Haram sites.
| Site | Modelled Pollutants | Fitted/Cross-Validated | R-Squared | RMSE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aziziah | PM10 | Fitted | 0.92 | 6.01 |
| Cross-validated | 0.87 | 7.23 | ||
| NO2 | Fitted | 0.89 | 6.54 | |
| Cross-validated | 0.85 | 6.12 | ||
| O3 | Fitted | 0.94 | 5.34 | |
| Cross-validated | 0.88 | 5.85 | ||
| Haram | PM10 | Fitted | 0.93 | 5.97 |
| Cross-validated | 0.91 | 6.23 | ||
| NO2 | Fitted | 0.90 | 6.07 | |
| Cross-validated | 0.89 | 6.32 | ||
| O3 | Fitted | 0.93 | 5.63 | |
| Cross-validated | 0.89 | 6.00 |
Comparing observed and predicted concentrations (µg/m3) for the testing dataset in the business-as-usual (BAU) scenario (observed–predicted). Positive difference shows an increase whereas negative difference shows a decrease in pollutant concentrations. The values outside the parentheses are the mean values, whereas the values within the parentheses are the minimum and maximum values.
| Site | O3 (µg/m3) | NO2 (µg/m3) | PM10 (µg/m3) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aziziah_observed | 42.03 | 21.4 | 93 |
| Aziziah_predicted | 24.19 | 24.4 | 104.20 |
| Difference | 17.84 | −3 | −11.2 |
| % difference | 42.45 | −12.30 | −10.75 |
| Otibiah_observed | 52.64 | 17.4 | 109.37 |
| Otibiah_predicted | 42.27 | 18.14 | 118.02 |
| Difference | 10.37 | −0.74 | −8.65 |
| % difference | 19.69 | −4.08 | −7.90 |
| Shawqiah_observed | 39.29 | NA | 100 |
| Shawqiah_predicted | 34.69 | NA | 106.39 |
| Difference | 4.59 | NA | −6.39 |
| % difference | 11.69 | NA | −6.01 |
| Umrah_observed | 44.7 | 11.5 | 97 |
| Umrah _predicted | 50.92 | 17.91 | 112.78 |
| Difference | −6.22 | −6.41 | −15.78 |
| % difference | −13.93 | −35.79 | −13.99 |
| Haram_observed | 53.58 | 26.7 | 81 |
| Haram_predicted | 26.83 | 31.33 | 89.67 |
| Difference | 26.75 | −4.64 | −8.67 |
| % difference | 49.92 | −14.81 | −9.67 |
Figure 4Comparing diurnal and weekly cycles of the predicted and measured concentrations during the lockdown period 2020 at the Aziziah monitoring site.