Estimating Ambient Air Pollution Using Structural Properties of Road Networks
Liam J Berrisford, Eraldo Ribeiro, Ronaldo Menezes

TL;DR
This paper presents a low-cost, transparent method using road network structural properties to estimate air pollution levels across districts in England and Wales, offering an accessible alternative to expensive monitoring systems.
Contribution
It introduces a simple linear regression model based on road network length to accurately estimate district-level air pollution, expanding coverage beyond urban areas.
Findings
High accuracy in identifying most polluted districts
Model uses only road network length data
Applicable in low-income countries for pollution estimation
Abstract
In recent years, the world has become increasingly concerned with air pollution. Particularly in the global north, countries are implementing systems to monitor air pollution on a large scale to aid decision-making. Such efforts are essential but they have at least three shortcomings: (1) they are costly and are difficult to implement expediently; (2) they focus on urban areas, which is where most people live, but this choice is prone to inequalities; and (3) the process of estimating air pollution lacks transparency. In this paper, we demonstrate that we can estimate air pollution using open-source information about the structural properties of roads; we focus on England and Wales in the United Kingdom (UK) in this paper although the methods here described are not dependent on specific datasets. Our approach makes it possible to implement an inexpensive method of estimating air…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAsphalt Pavement Performance Evaluation · Air Quality and Health Impacts · Infrastructure Maintenance and Monitoring
