Dominance of Wildfires Impact on Air Quality Exceedances During the 2020 Record‐Breaking Wildfire Season in the United States

Yunyao Li(George Mason University), Daniel Tong(George Mason University), Siqi Ma(George Mason University), Xiaoyang Zhang(South Dakota State University), Shobha Kondragunta(NOAA Center for Satellite Applications and Research), Fangjun Li(South Dakota State University), Rick Saylor(NOAA Air Resources Laboratory)
Geophysical Research Letters
October 22, 2021
Cited by 93Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract The western United States experienced a record‐breaking wildfire season in 2020. This study quantifies the contribution of wildfire emissions to the exceedances of health‐based National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) for fine particles (PM 2.5 ) by comparing two CMAQ simulations, with and without wildfire emissions. During August to October 2020, western wildfires contributed 23% of surface PM 2.5 in the contiguous US (CONUS), with a larger contribution in Pacific Coast (43%) and Mountain Region (42%). Consequently, wildfires were the primary contributor to the 3,720 observed exceedances. The wildfire influence peaked on September 14th, 2020, when 273 exceedances were recorded and wildfire emissions contributed 41%, 81%, and 72% to surface PM 2.5 concentrations in the CONUS, Pacific Coast, and Mountain Region, respectively. Our finding highlights the predominating influence of wildfires on air quality, and potentially human health, that is expected to grow with increasing fire activities, while anthropogenic emissions decrease.


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