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Estimating the removal of atmospheric particulate pollution by the urban tree canopy of London, under current and future environments
Ist Teil von
Landscape and urban planning, 2011-11, Vol.103 (2), p.129-138
Ort / Verlag
Amsterdam: Elsevier B.V
Erscheinungsjahr
2011
Quelle
Alma/SFX Local Collection
Beschreibungen/Notizen
PM
10 capture by four categories of urban tree canopy of the greater London Authority area estimated using (a) the UFORE model and (b) an adapted UFORE model. Estimates are for 2006 with current and 2050 PM
10 concentrations and for 2050 meteorology and PM
10 concentrations with five different planting scenarios.
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► London's trees remove between 852 and 2121 tonnes of particulate pollution (PM10) annually. ► Using seasonal rather than hourly inputs has little impact on modelled future PM10 depositions. ► Tree planting in more polluted areas and using street trees has the greatest benefit to air quality. ► Air quality benefits are greatest with a larger proportion of coniferous to broadleaved trees. ► This work is part of the EU BRIDGE project to provide decision support for integrated city design.
Urban green space and particularly the tree canopy have been highlighted as offering a mitigation potential against atmospheric particulate pollution. In this paper current and future particulate (PM
10) deposition to the urban tree canopy of the Greater London Authority (GLA) was estimated. A modelling approach was used based on the Urban Forest Effects Model (UFORE) and a modified version. Here we give evidence showing that these deposition models can be adapted to run from annual mean meteorological and PM
10 concentration data, thus providing a methodology to examine future scenarios.
Depending on the modelling approach, the urban canopy of the GLA is currently estimated to remove between 852 and 2121
tonnes of PM
10 annually; representing between 0.7% and 1.4% of PM
10 from the urban boundary layer. Estimates of PM
10 removal which take into account a planned increased in tree cover, from the current 20% to 30% of the GLA land area, suggest deposition of 1109–2379
tonnes (1.1–2.6% removal) by the year 2050. The evidence provided here suggests that the targeting of tree planting in the most polluted areas of the GLA and particularly the use of street trees which have the greatest exposure to PM
10, would have the greatest benefit to future air quality. The increased deposition would be greatest if a larger proportion of coniferous to broadleaved trees were used at such sites.