Global Impact of COVID-19 Restrictions on the Atmospheric Concentrations of Nitrogen Dioxide and Ozone
Christoph A. Keller, Mat. J. Evans, K. Emma Knowland, Christa A., Hasenkopf, Sruti Modekurty, Robert A. Lucchesi, Tomohiro Oda, Bruno B., Franca, Felipe C. Mandarino, M. Valeria D\'iaz Su\'arez, Robert G. Ryan, Luke, H. Fakes, Steven Pawson

TL;DR
This study quantifies the impact of COVID-19 restrictions on nitrogen dioxide and ozone levels worldwide using machine learning, revealing significant NO2 reductions and complex ozone responses due to atmospheric chemistry.
Contribution
It introduces a machine learning approach driven by NASA GEOS-CF data to accurately assess air quality changes during COVID-19 restrictions globally.
Findings
NO2 levels decreased by 18% on average from February 2020.
Global NOx emissions reduced by 2.9 TgN, about 5.1% of annual anthropogenic emissions.
Surface ozone showed mixed responses, with some locations experiencing increases up to 50%.
Abstract
Social-distancing to combat the COVID-19 pandemic has led to widespread reductions in air pollutant emissions. Quantifying these changes requires a business as usual counterfactual that accounts for the synoptic and seasonal variability of air pollutants. We use a machine learning algorithm driven by information from the NASA GEOS-CF model to assess changes in nitrogen dioxide (NO) and ozone (O) at 5,756 observation sites in 46 countries from January through June 2020. Reductions in NO correlate with timing and intensity of COVID-19 restrictions, ranging from 60% in severely affected cities (e.g., Wuhan, Milan) to little change (e.g., Rio de Janeiro, Taipei). On average, NO concentrations were 18% lower than business as usual from February 2020 onward. China experienced the earliest and steepest decline, but concentrations since April have mostly recovered and…
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