Abstract
Objective
To compare ambient air quality standards for the mass concentration of aerosol particles smaller than approximately 2.5 μm (PM2.5) and exposure to these particles in national and regional jurisdictions worldwide.
Methods
We did a review of government documents and literature on air quality standards. We extracted and summarized the PM2.5 concentration limits effective before July 2020, noting whether standards were enforced, voluntary or target. We compared averaging methods and permitted periods of time that standards may be exceeded. We made a descriptive analysis of PM2.5 standards by population, total area and population density of jurisdictions. We also compared data on actual PM2.5 air quality against the standards.
Findings
We obtained data on standards from 62 jurisdictions worldwide, including 58 countries. Of the world’s 136.06 million km2 land under national jurisdictions, 71.70 million km2 (52.7%) lack an official PM2.5 air quality standard, and 3.17 billion people live in areas without a standard. The existing standards ranged from 8 to 75 µg/m3, mostly higher than the World Health Organization guideline annual limit of < 10 µg/m3. The weakest PM2.5 standards were often exceeded, while the more stringent standards were often met. Several jurisdictions with the highest population density demonstrated compliance with relatively stringent standards.
Conclusion
The metrics used in PM2.5 ambient air quality standards should be harmonized worldwide to facilitate accurate assessment of risks associated with PM2.5 exposure. Population density alone does not preclude stringent PM2.5 standards. Modernization of standards can also include short-term standards to unmask PM2.5 fluctuations in high-pollution areas.
Résumé
Objectif
Comparer les normes de qualité de l'air ambiant en termes de concentration massique des particules en suspension dont le diamètre est inférieur à 2,5 μm environ (MP2,5) ainsi que l'exposition à ces particules dans les juridictions nationales et régionales du monde entier.
Méthodes
Nous avons examiné les publications et documents officiels consacrés aux normes de qualité de l'air. Nous en avons extrait les limites de concentration en MP2,5 appliquées avant juillet 2020 et les avons synthétisées, en notant si ces normes étaient imposées, facultatives ou ciblées. Nous avons comparé les méthodes de calcul des moyennes et les périodes durant lesquelles il était possible de s'en écarter. Nous avons également réalisé une analyse descriptive des normes en matière de MP2,5 en fonction de la population, du territoire et de la densité démographique des juridictions. Enfin, nous avons effectué une comparaison entre les données concernant la qualité de l'air actuelle en termes de MP2,5 d'une part, et les normes de l'autre.
Résultats
Nous avons obtenu des informations sur les normes en vigueur au sein de 62 juridictions à travers le monde, réparties dans 58 pays. Sur les 136,06 millions de km2 de territoires sous juridiction nationale, 71,70 millions de km2 (52,7%) ne faisaient l'objet d'aucune norme officielle fixant la qualité de l'air selon les MP2,5 et 3,17 milliards de personnes vivent dans des zones où il n'existe aucune norme en vigueur. Les normes actuelles vont de 8 à 75 µg/m3 et sont généralement supérieures à la limite annuelle < 10 µg/m3 définie dans les lignes directrices de l'Organisation mondiale de la Santé. Les normes MP2,5 les plus basses étaient fréquemment dépassées, tandis que les plus strictes étaient souvent respectées. De nombreuses juridictions affichant une forte densité démographique ont montré qu'elles se conformaient à des normes relativement strictes.
Conclusion
Les chiffres employés pour déterminer les normes MP2,5 indiquant la qualité de l'air ambiant devraient être harmonisés dans le monde entier afin de mieux évaluer les risques associés à une exposition aux MP2,5. La densité démographique n'empêche pas à elle seule l'adoption de normes MP2,5 strictes. Par ailleurs, des mesures à court terme peuvent être intégrées dans la modernisation des normes pour identifier les fluctuations de MP2,5 dans les régions très polluées.
Resumen
Objetivo
Comparar las normas de calidad del aire ambiente en lo que respecta a la concentración en masa de partículas de aerosol inferiores a 2,5 μm (PM2,5) aproximadamente y la exposición a esas partículas en las jurisdicciones nacionales y regionales de todo el mundo.
Métodos
Realizamos una revisión de los documentos del gobierno y la literatura sobre las normas de calidad del aire. Extrajimos y resumimos los límites de concentración de PM2,5 efectivos antes de julio de 2020, señalando si los estándares se aplicaban, eran voluntarios o eran objetivos. Comparamos los métodos de promediación y los períodos de tiempo permitidos en que se pueden superar los estándares. Hicimos un análisis descriptivo de los estándares de PM2,5 por población, superficie terrestre y densidad de población de las jurisdicciones. También comparamos los datos sobre la calidad real del aire de PM2,5 con los estándares.
Resultados
Obtuvimos datos sobre las normas de 62 jurisdicciones de todo el mundo, incluidos 58 países. De los 136,06 millones de km2 del mundo que se encuentran bajo jurisdicciones nacionales, 71,70 millones de km2 (52,7%) carecen de un estándar oficial de calidad del aire de PM2,5, y 3,17 mil millones de personas viven en zonas sin estándar. Los estándares existentes oscilaban entre 8 y 75 µg/m3, en su mayoría superiores al límite anual de la Organización Mundial de la Salud de < 10 µg/m3. A menudo se superaban los estándares más débiles de PM2,5, mientras que a menudo se cumplían los estándares más estrictos. Varias jurisdicciones con la mayor densidad de población demostraron el cumplimiento de normas relativamente estrictas.
Conclusión
Las mediciones utilizadas en las normas de calidad del aire ambiente de PM2,5 deben armonizarse en todo el mundo para facilitar la evaluación precisa de los riesgos asociados a la exposición a PM2,5. La densidad de población por sí sola no impide que se apliquen normas estrictas sobre las PM2,5. La modernización de las normas también puede incluir normas a corto plazo para desenmascarar las fluctuaciones de PM2,5 en áreas de alta contaminación.
ملخص
الغرض مقارنة معايير جودة الهواء المحيط لتركيز كتلة جزيئات الهواء الأقل من 2.5 ميكرومتر تقريبًا (PM2.5)، والتعرض لهذه الجسيمات في السلطات القضائية الوطنية والإقليمية في جميع أنحاء العالم.
الطريقة قمنا بمراجعة الوثائق والمؤلفات الحكومية عن معايير جودة الهواء. قمنا باستخراج وتلخيص حدود تركيز جزيئات الهواء 2.5 ميكرومتر التي كانت سارية قبل يوليو/تموز 2020، مع ملاحظة ما إذا كانت المعايير إجبارية أو طوعية أو مستهدفة. قمنا بمقارنة طرق حساب المتوسط والفترات الزمنية المسموح بها والتي قد يتم تجاوز المعايير فيها. لقد أجرينا تحليلًا وصفيًا لمعايير 2.5 ميكرومتر حسب السكان، ومساحة الأرض، والكثافة السكانية للسلطات القضائية. قمنا أيضًا بمقارنة البيانات الخاصة بجودة الهواء بتركيز 2.5 ميكرومتر في مقابل المعايير.
النتائج حصلنا على بيانات بخصوص المعايير من 62 سلطة قضائية في حول العالم، بما يشمل 58 دولة. من بين 136.06 مليون كيلومتر مربع من الأراضي الخاضعة للسلطات القضائية الوطنية، تفتقر مساحة 71.70 مليون كيلومتر مربع (52.7%) إلى معيار رسمي لجودة الهواء بتركيز 2.5 ميكرومتر، ويعيش 3.17 مليار نسمة في مناطق دون معيار. تراوحت المعايير الحالية من 8 إلى 75 ميكروجرام/متر مكعب، وهي في الغالب أعلى من الحد السنوي لتوجيه منظمة الصحة العالمية، والبالغ أقل من 10 ميكروجرام/متر مكعب. تم غالبًا تجاوز أضعف معايير تركيز 2.5 ميكرومتر، بينما تم في الأغلب الوفاء بالمعايير الأكثر صرامة. أظهرت العديد من السلطات القضائية ذات الكثافة السكانية الأعلى امتثالها لمعايير صارمة نسبياً.
الاستنتاج يجب تنسيق المقاييس المستخدمة في معايير جودة الهواء المحيط بتركيز 2.5 ميكرومتر في جميع أنحاء العالم، وذلك لتسهيل التقييم الدقيق للمخاطر المرتبطة بالتعرض لتركيز 2.5 ميكرومتر. لا تعيق الكثافة السكانية وحدها المعايير الصارمة لتركيز 2.5 ميكرومتر. يمكن كذلك أن يشمل تحديث المعايير معايير قصيرة الأجل لكشف تقلبات التركيز 2.5 ميكرومتر في المناطق عالية التلوث.
摘要
目的
旨在比较世界各国和各地区有关气溶胶颗粒【直径大约小于 2.5 微米 (PM2.5)】质量浓度和暴露情况的环境空气质量标准。
方法
我们已查阅有关空气质量标准的政府文件和文献。我们提取并汇总了 2020 年 7 月前生效的 PM2.5 浓度限值,并标明了各标准是要求强制、自愿还是有针对性地执行。我们比较了平均方法以及可能超出标准要求的允许时间段。基于辖区内的人口、土地面积和人口密度对 PM2.5 标准进行了描述性分析。还将实际的 PM2.5 空气质量数据与标准进行了比较。
结果
我们采纳了全球 62 个司法管辖区(包括 58 个国家)与标准有关的数据。在全球 13,606 万平方公里受国家管辖的土地中,7,170 万平方公里(占 52.7%)缺乏正规的 PM2.5 空气质量标准管制,31.7 亿人生活在未设置相关标准的地区。当前各标准的规定限值从 8 微克/立方米到 75 微克/立方米不等,大部分高于世界卫生组织发布的指南规定的年均浓度限值(低于 10 微克/立方米)。设置最宽松的 PM2.5 标准,通常会超标,而若标准比较严格,反而通常会符合要求。调查显示,人口密度最高的几个司法管辖区采用了相对严格的标准。
结论
PM2.5 环境空气质量标准规定的指标应在全球范围内保持统一,以便准确评估 PM2.5 暴露相关风险。不能仅因人口密度小而放弃采用严格的 PM2.5 标准。标准的现代化改造还可能包括制定短期标准,以探明高污染地区的 PM2.5 值波动情况。
Резюме
Цель
Сравнить стандарты качества окружающего воздуха для массовой концентрации аэрозольных частиц размером менее прибл. 2,5 мкм (PM2,5) и воздействие этих частиц на уровне государственных и региональных юрисдикций в мировом масштабе.
Методы
Авторы выполнили критическую оценку официальных государственных документов и литературы по стандартам качества воздуха. Авторы извлекли и обобщили данные по предельной концентрации PM2,5, которая действовала до июля 2020 года, отмечая, были стандарты принудительными, добровольными или целевыми. Авторы сравнили методы усреднения и допустимые периоды времени, в течение которых стандарты могут быть превышены. Был выполнен описательный анализ стандартов PM2,5 по населению, площади территории и плотности населения соответствующих юрисдикций. Данные о фактическом качестве воздуха PM2,5 также сравнивались со стандартами.
Результаты
Авторы получили данные по стандартам из 62 юрисдикций в мировом масштабе, включая 58 стран. Из 136,06 млн км2 территорий государственных юрисдикций в мире 71,70 млн км2 (52,7%) не имеют официального стандарта качества воздуха PM2,5, а 3,17 млрд человек проживают в районах, не имеющих стандарта. Существующие стандарты варьируются в диапазоне от 8 до 75 мкг/м3, что в большинстве случаев превышает годовой предел, установленный Всемирной организацией здравоохранения и составляющий <10 мкг/м3. Самые низкие стандарты PM2,5 часто превышались, в то время как более строгие стандарты часто соблюдались. Несколько юрисдикций с самой высокой плотностью населения демонстрировали соблюдение относительно строгих стандартов.
Вывод
Показатели, используемые в стандартах качества окружающего воздуха PM2,5, необходимо согласовать во всемирном масштабе, чтобы обеспечить точную оценку рисков, связанных с воздействием PM2,5. Сама по себе плотность населения не препятствует соблюдению строгих стандартов PM2,5. Процесс совершенствования стандартов может также включать определение краткосрочных стандартов для выявления колебаний PM2,5 в районах с высокой степенью загрязнения воздуха.
Introduction
Millions of people die prematurely every year due to cardiovascular disease, pulmonary disease and cancer caused by air pollution.1 For the premature deaths due to cancer, air pollution is a leading environmental cause.2 Pollutants in the air exist as gases, and solid and liquid airborne particles also called aerosols. Aerosols occur in wide-ranging sizes. Among the different metrics describing particle size, the most common is aerodynamic diameter (diameter of the spherical particle with a density of 1 g/m3 that has the same settling velocity as the given particle).3 Three particle size ranges with the upper limits of 10 μm, 2.5 μm and 1 μm are named PM10, PM2.5 and PM1, respectively. They are used to define fractions of aerosols for regulatory purposes. Only PM10 and PM2.5 are currently regulated in the form of ambient air quality standards. Of these two, we focus on PM2.5 due to its stronger association with adverse health effects.1
The PM2.5 component of air pollution was responsible for an estimated 4.2 million annual premature deaths globally in 2015.4 In 2010, China had 1.3 million premature deaths due to exposure to PM2.5, India had 575 000 and Pakistan had 105 000 deaths per year.5 The 28 European Union (EU) countries had 173 000 and the United States of America (USA) 52 000 annual premature deaths.5 Therefore, tightening and enforcing PM2.5 ambient air quality standards could reduce the burden of disease and premature mortality.
Here, we review PM2.5 standards worldwide and compare standards across different jurisdictions.
Methods
We carried out a review of PM2.5 air quality standards worldwide, following the applicable guidelines of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (data repository).6
Data sources
We obtained the data on absolute particle mass concentration limits from regulatory documents, government websites and other sources published up to 27 October 2020. We used articles in peer-reviewed publications and documents of nationally or internationally recognized organizations when we were unable to identify government sources. We conducted an online search for each country listed in World Population Review,7 one by one, using the search strategy exemplified in Fig. 1 and described in detail in the data repository.6 Box 1 presents the eligibility criteria for inclusion in the analysis. We consulted documents in Arabic, English, French, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin, Persian, Russian, Spanish, Vietnamese and Ukrainian. We used Google Translate (Google LLC, Mountain View, USA) for some search strings, websites and documents.
Box 1. Eligibility criteria for inclusion of documents in the study of PM2.5 ambient air quality standards worldwide.
The standards had to be published in government documents, on government websites, in government-commissioned reports, reports of nationally or globally recognized organizations, or in peer-reviewed publications.
Documents in any official language were acceptable.
Eligible standards had to specifically mention PM2.5 or its equivalent in the language of the document or define the regulated fraction of ambient particulate air pollution as particles or aerosols smaller than approximately 2.5 µm. Conditions constituting a part of, or the full, ISO definition of PM2.5 were allowed.
Only annual and 24-hour standards were considered for the summary analysis. Standards with other averaging periods were included in the summary table only.
Multinational, national and regional jurisdictions were included. Self-determination by jurisdictions was sufficient.
Standards must have been in force at the time of the summary analysis. Standards scheduled to come into force on a future date were included in the summary table only.
The level of enforceability of the standards or lack thereof was not considered as a criterion for inclusion in the summary analysis.
ISO: International Organization for Standardization.
Data collection
We extracted the following data items, if found: definitions of PM2.5; absolute PM2.5 concentration limits; averaging periods to which absolute PM2.5 concentration limits apply (e.g. 20 minutes, 24 hours, annual); averaging method (e.g. arithmetic mean, 98th or 99th percentile); envelope averaging period (e.g. 3 years for the 24-hour standard); minimum legally mandated number of valid data points (e.g. 75%); number of permitted exceedances of the PM2.5 limit over the averaging period (e.g. nine days per year); tiers of standards (e.g. commercial and residential, primary and secondary); categories of standards (e.g. enforced, voluntary or target); and dates from which standards were effective. We also identified separate standards for some subnational or supranational jurisdictions.
We obtained the data on population and area of jurisdictions from the World Population Review7, and the data on country estimates for mean PM2.5 ambient concentrations for 2016 from the World Health Organization (WHO).8 These WHO data are synthesized from the data routinely measured at selected stationary monitoring stations in urban areas, satellite remote sensing, topography and population estimates.
The data on the standards were initially compiled by one author in 2018 and 2019 and were independently verified and updated in September 2019 against the sources by another author to ensure accuracy, except for Egypt, interpreted by a colleague and native speaker. We later updated and reanalysed the standards effective in July 2020.
We converted the Minguo calendar dates in China, Taiwan’s regulations to the Roman calendar.
Data analysis
We made a descriptive analysis of how the metrics of the standards compared across different jurisdictions. We analysed the standards against the total population of jurisdictions, population density and geographical area of jurisdictions. We also compared the standards against the levels of actual urban PM2.5 air pollution in different jurisdictions to determine where the standards were met and where they were exceeded.
We categorized the PM2.5 air quality standards as: (i) enforced, when a penalty, enforcement, compliance or a similar term was mentioned in the source; (ii) voluntary, when stated so in the source; or (iii) target, when a policy statement existed regarding a level of PM2.5 that various stakeholders agreed to work to achieve. We provide this classification to illustrate the approximate relative occurrence of the three different regulatory approaches. This classification should be interpreted with caution because stakeholders in each jurisdiction may by law or in reality apply differing interpretations of regulatory statements regarding enforcement or lack thereof.
Results
We identified the existence of PM2.5 ambient air quality standards in 62 subnational, national and supranational jurisdictions worldwide, including 58 countries. The analysed national and regional PM2.5 ambient air quality standards are listed in Table 1 (available at: http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/99/2/19-245704). We obtained data on actual PM2.5 ambient air pollution for 175 national jurisdictions. Out of these, we used the data on actual PM2.5 ambient air pollution for 57 jurisdictions for the analyses of PM2.5 ambient air quality standards versus ambient PM2.5 air pollution.
Table 1. Air quality standards for the concentration of PM2.5 around the world, effective before July 2020 .
Area or jurisdiction by WHO region | PM2.5 standard, current | Since year | PM2.5 standard, future (year) | Enforced, voluntary or targeta | Reference(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Global | |||||
WHO guidelines | |||||
Level of no health effects |
3–5 µg/m3 |
NA |
NA |
NA |
WHO, 20069 |
Target levels |
Annual: 10 µg/m3; 24-hour: 25 µg/m3 |
2005 |
Plans not published |
NA |
WHO, 20069 |
African Region | |||||
South Africa |
Annual: 20 µg/m3; 24-hour: 40 µg/m3 |
2016 |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 25 µg/m3 (2030) |
Enforcement regulations in draft stage |
Department of Environmental Affairs of the Government of South Africa, 201210 |
Region of the Americas | |||||
Argentina, Buenos Aires |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 65 µg/m3 |
NR |
Plans not published |
NR |
The Clean Air Institute, 201211 |
Bolivia, La Paz |
Annual: 10 µg/m3; 24-hour: 25 µg/m3 |
NR |
Plans not published |
NR |
The Clean Air Institute, 201211 |
Canada |
Annual: 8.8 µg/m3 (3-year average of the annual average of all 1-hour concentrations); 24-hour: 27 µg/m3 (3-year average of the annual 98th percentile of the daily 24-hour average concentrations) |
2020 |
Plans not published |
Voluntary |
Canadian Council of Ministers of the Environment, 202012 |
Canada, Province of Quebec |
24-hour: 30 µg/m3 |
2011 |
Plans not published |
Voluntary |
Ministry of the Environment and the Fight against Climate Change, 201613 |
Canada, Province of Ontario |
24-hour: 30 µg/m3 (3-year average of the annual 98th percentile of the daily 24-hour average concentrations); 24-hour: 25 µg/m3 for individual sources |
2012 |
Plans not published |
Voluntary |
Standards Development Branch of the Ontario Ministry of the Environment, 201214 |
Chile |
Annual: 20 µg/m3 (98th 1-year percentile); 24-hour: 50 µg/m3 (3-year average) |
2011 |
Plans not published |
Target |
Ministry of the Environment of Chile, 201115 |
Colombia |
Annual: 25 µg/m3; 24-hour: 50 µg/m3 |
NR |
Plans not published |
NR |
The Clean Air Institute, 201211 |
Dominican Republic |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 65 µg/m3 |
NR |
Plans not published |
NR |
The Clean Air Institute, 201211 |
Ecuador |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 65 µg/m3 |
NR |
Plans not published |
NR |
The Clean Air Institute, 201211 |
El Salvador |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 65 µg/m3 |
NR |
Plans not published |
NR |
The Clean Air Institute, 201211 |
Mexico |
Annual: 12 µg/m3 (average of 24-hour concentrations over at least 1 year; at least 75% of 24-hour samples must be valid in each of 4 quarters of the year); 24-hour: 45 µg/m3 (arithmetic mean with at least 75% of valid hourly concentrations, 18 records) |
2014 |
Plans not published |
Target |
Secretary of Health of the United Mexican States, 201416 |
Paraguay |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 30 µg/m3 |
2015 |
Plans not published |
NR |
Kutlar Joss et al., 201717 |
Peru |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 25 µg/m3 |
2014 |
Plans not published |
NR |
The Clean Air Institute, 201211 |
Trinidad and Tobago |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 65 µg/m3 |
2015 |
Plans not published |
NR |
Kutlar Joss et al., 201717 |
United States of America |
Annual, primary (protective of public health): 12 µg/m3; Annual, secondary (protective of public welfare): 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 35 µg/m3 (98th percentile averaged over 3 years) |
2012 (24-hour: value set in 2006, kept in 2012) |
Plans not published |
Enforced |
United States Environmental Protection Agency, 2013;18
United States Environmental Protection Agency, 201619 |
South-East Asia Region | |||||
Bangladesh |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 65 µg/m3 |
2005 |
Plans not published |
Target (long-term objective) |
Asian Development Bank and the Clean Air Initiative for Asian Cities Center, 200620 |
India |
Annual: 40 µg/m3; 24-hour: 60 µg/m3 (98th 1-year percentile) |
2009 |
Plans not published |
Enforced |
Central Pollution Control Board of the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change of the Government of India, 200921 |
European Region | |||||
European Union Member States (28 countries) and Ukraine |
Annual: 25 µg/m3; 24-hour: none; Average exposure indicator: 20 µg/m3 |
2015 |
All measures to reach 18 µg/m3, average exposure indicator (2020) |
Enforced |
European Commission, 2017;22
Association of Engineers-Consultants of Ukraine, 201523 |
Norway |
Annual: 12 µg/m3; 24-hour: none |
2015 |
Plans not published |
NR |
Norwegian Environment Agency, 201224 |
Russian Federation |
Annual: 25 µg/m3; 24-hour: 35 µg/m3 (99th annual percentile); 20-minute: 160 µg/m3 |
2010 |
Plans not published |
Enforced |
Chief Government Sanitary Physician of the Russian Federation, 201825 |
Switzerland |
Annual: 10 µg/m3 (arithmetic mean) |
2018 |
Plans not published |
Enforced |
The Swiss Federal Council, 201826 |
Eastern Mediterranean Region | |||||
Egypt |
Annual: 50 µg/m3; 24-hour: 80 µg/m3 |
2012 |
Plans not published |
NR |
Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency of the Ministry of Environment of the Arab Republic of Egypt, 201227 |
Pakistan |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 35 µg/m3 (98th 3-year percentile) |
NR |
Plans not published |
NR |
Asian Development Bank and the Clean Air Initiative for Asian Cities Center, 2006;28
Niaz et al., 201629 |
Saudi Arabia |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 65 µg/m3 (exceedances of either standard “as a result of abnormal natural background concentrations shall not be considered a violation of the standard”) |
2001 |
Plans not published |
NR |
Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu, 200430 |
Western Pacific Region | |||||
Australia |
Annual: 8 µg/m3; 24-hour: 25 µg/m3 |
NR |
Plans not published |
Enforced |
Department of the Environment and Heritage of the Australian Government, 200531 |
China |
First-class zone (residential) Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 35 µg/m3 Second-class zone (commercial) Annual: 35 µg/m3; 24-hour: 75 µg/m3 |
2016 |
Plans not published |
Enforced |
Ministry of Environmental Protection of the People's Republic of China, 201632 |
China, Taiwan |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 35 µg/m3 |
2012, Minguo calendar 101 |
Annual: 15 µg/m3 (2020, Minguo calendar 109) |
Enforced |
Environmental Protection Administration Executive Yuan Republic of China, 201533 |
China, Hong Kong SAR |
Annual: 35 µg/m3; 24-hour: 75 µg/m3 (with 9 exceedances allowed) |
2014 |
Plan to reduce emissions to achieve 2014 standard |
Target |
Environmental Protection Department of the Government of the Hong Kong SAR, 2017;34 Environment Bureau, 201335 |
Japan |
Annual: 15 µg/m3; 24-hour: 35 µg/m3 (98th annual percentile) |
2009 |
Plans not published |
NR |
Ministry of the Environment, Government of Japan, 200936 |
Republic of Korea |
Annual: 20 µg/m3; 24-hour: 50 µg/m3 (98th annual percentile) |
2015 |
Annual: 15 µg/m3 (2030) |
Enforced |
Ministry of Environment of the Republic of Korea, 2017;37
Ministry of Environment of the Republic of Korea, 2017;38 Ministry of Environment of the Republic of Korea, 2015;39 Shin, 201640 |
Singapore |
Annual: 12 µg/m3; 24-hour: mean 37.5 µg/m3 |
2020 |
Annual: 10 µg/m3 (long-term); 24-hour: mean 25 µg/m3 (long-term) |
Target |
Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources of the National Environment Agency of Singapore, 2015;41
National Environment Agency of the Singapore Government, 201742 |
Viet Nam | Annual: 25 µg/m3; 24-hour: 50 µg/m3 | NR | Plans not published | NR | Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment of Viet Nam, 201343 |
NA: not applicable; NR: not reported or no information available; PM: particulate matter; SAR: Special Administrative Region; WHO: World Health Organization.
a We classified standards as enforced when a penalty, enforcement, compliance or a similar term was mentioned in the source; voluntary when stated so in the source; or target when a policy statement existed regarding a level of PM2.5 that various stakeholders agreed to work to achieve.
Note: PM2.5 is mass concentration of aerosol particles smaller than approximately 2.5 μm.3
Averaging periods for measurements
Different jurisdictions set different intervals over which they average the measured PM2.5 concentrations, such as 20 minutes, 24 hours, annual and 3 years. Most jurisdictions used the 98th or 99th percentile, and some used the arithmetic mean of all PM2.5 measurements over a prescribed period. For example, in the USA, the annual arithmetic mean is used in the annual PM2.5 standard, and the 98th percentile of 24-hour arithmetic means of concentrations over a 3-year period is used in the 24-hour PM2.5 standard. In the Russian Federation, the 99th percentile of 24-hour arithmetic means of concentrations over 1 year is applied. Some jurisdictions set a maximum allowed number of exceedances of a time-averaged PM2.5 concentration. For example, nine exceedances per year are allowed in Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR), and no exceedances are allowed in the Russian Federation. Critically, many jurisdictions did not specify any averaging method, the minimum percentage of valid data points, or exceedances.
Stringency of air quality standards
Fig. 2 and Fig. 3 present a map of the world with jurisdictions coloured according to the stringency of the annual and 24-hour standards. For China, we used the commercial-area PM2.5 standards because many people lived near factories and other sources of air pollution. The existing annual standards ranged from 8 to 75 µg/m3 in different countries worldwide (Fig. 2). Therefore, most annual standards exceeded both the level at which no detected health effects are expected according to WHO (3–5 µg/m3) and the guideline annual PM2.5 pollution limits set by WHO. These guidelines are 10 µg/m3 (annual) and 25 µg/m3 (24-hour).9 The real ambient air pollution also exceeded WHO guidelines in most of the world (Fig. 4).
Fewer jurisdictions had PM2.5 24-hour standards than annual standards. Notably, only the Russian Federation had a 24-hour standard in the European Region. The Russian Federation had a 20-minute PM2.5 standard along with the 24-hour and annual standards, while most other countries of the former Soviet Union did not have any PM2.5 standards.
In the USA, there were primary and secondary standards. This primary standard allows for an adequate safety margin to protect public health, considering the uncertainties of available technical and scientific information. The secondary standard has no attainment deadline and is based on known or anticipated adverse effects on public welfare, including ecosystems, buildings and monuments.18
In the EU countries, additional PM2.5 objectives targeted population exposure to fine particles. These objectives are set at the national level and based on the average exposure indicator, which is a 3-year running annual mean PM2.5 concentration averaged over selected monitoring stations in urban areas (Table 1).44 Ukraine, which has an association agreement with the EU, adopted the EU’s PM2.5 standard to take effect in 2018. The EU supported the creation of the air quality monitoring infrastructure and implementation of the standard in Ukraine since 2015, yet progress has been slow, and the monitoring network has not been completed as of 2020.45
In the Eastern Mediterranean Region, with known high levels of PM2.5 air pollution due to desert dust, fuel-burning emissions and oil refining, only Egypt, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia had PM2.5 air quality standards.46,47
South Africa was the only country in the African Region with a PM2.5 standard. The current annual standard of 20 µg/m3 and the 24-hour standard of 40 µg/m3 will be lowered to 15 µg/m3 and 25 µg/m3, respectively, on 1 January 2030.10
China used different PM2.5 standards for the first-class (residential) and the second-class (commercial) zones. Both the annual and the 24-hour standards differed substantially for the two zones: 15 µg/m3 annual and 35 µg/m3 24-hour for the first-class zones and 35 µg/m3 annual and 75 µg/m3 24-hour for the second-class zones.
Air quality standards by population density
Of the world’s total area of jurisdictions in the WHO World Population Review (136.06 million km2), just under half (64.36 million km2; 47.3%) was part of national jurisdictions with any PM2.5 annual ambient air quality standard (Fig. 5). The medium-stringency annual standards ≤ 25 µg/m3 covered 52.52 million km2 or 38.6% of the world’s total area of national jurisdictions, including 28.98 million km2 or 21.3% protected by the strictest official annual PM2.5 ambient air quality standards ≤ 15 µg/m3. The least stringent annual standards exceeding 25 µg/m3 (up to 40 µg/m3 in India) covered only 11.84 million km2 or 8.7% of the world land part of national jurisdictions, home to 2.78 billion people or 36.6% of the global population of 7.63 billion in 2018.7 Areas where no PM2.5 ambient air quality standard was in effect are home to 3.17 billion people.
We compared the total population and area of jurisdictions by annual PM2.5 standard and population density (Fig. 6). The areas of low population density (< 100 inhabitants per km2) applied only the strictest (≤ 15 µg/m3) or medium (20–25 µg/m3) annual PM2.5 standards. In the areas of high population density of 100–1000 inhabitants per km2, most people and land were covered by the least stringent annual PM2.5 standards (> 25 µg/m3). However, in areas with the highest population density (> 1000 inhabitants per km2) with a PM2.5 ambient air quality standard, most population and land were covered by the strictest standards (≤ 15 µg/m3). Therefore, high population density alone cannot be a barrier to achieving compliance with stringent standards. Many densely populated cities within sparsely populated jurisdictions were covered by and often met the strictest standards set by those jurisdictions.
We plotted annual PM2.5 standards in individual jurisdictions listed in Table 1 versus the population density (logarithmic scale), including individual EU’s national jurisdictions (Fig. 7). Several notable clusters of jurisdictions stood out. Australia and Canada had a combination of very strict annual PM2.5 ambient air quality standards (8 and 8.8 µg/m3, respectively) and low population density (3.3 and 3.7 inhabitants per km2, respectively), but contained several densely populated cities. Singapore had one of the highest population densities (8265 inhabitants per km2) yet one of the lowest annual PM2.5 ambient air quality standards (12 µg/m3). Hong Kong SAR also had one of the highest population densities (6785 inhabitants per km2), but, unlike Singapore, one of the least stringent annual PM2.5 standards (35 µg/m3). Both China and India had one of the least stringent annual PM2.5 standards in the world (35 and 40 µg/m3, respectively) combined with high but different population densities (146 and 416 inhabitants per km2). Norway and Paraguay stood out with their stricter annual PM2.5 standards (15 µg/m3 in both) and low population densities (16.7 and 17.2 inhabitants per km2) relative to those in their respective regions. The EU’s annual PM2.5 ambient air quality standard was relatively lax among the prosperous jurisdictions, notably higher than in Australia, Canada, Japan, Singapore, South Africa and the USA. Several densely populated jurisdictions could maintain relatively strict annual PM2.5 ambient air quality standards: Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Japan, Singapore, China (Taiwan only) and Trinidad and Tobago.
Comparison of air quality to standards
The annual PM2.5 ambient air quality standards were often exceeded in the jurisdictions with the highest PM2.5 ambient air pollution (Fig. 8; available at: http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/99/2/19-245704). Singapore stood out by its relatively strict annual PM2.5 standard despite PM2.5 air pollution that considerably exceeded the standard. Where the EU’s standard was in effect, the PM2.5 air pollution was highly variable, ranging from 20.8 µg/m3 in Bulgaria to 5.9 µg/m3 in Iceland.
We excluded many jurisdictions where PM2.5 pollution exceeded 30 µg/m3 (Fig. 9) from the analysis because they lacked an annual PM2.5 ambient air quality standard. These jurisdictions need urgent PM2.5 air pollution reduction measures. These excluded jurisdictions included Armenia, Mongolia, Nepal, North Macedonia, Tajikistan and Turkey and many countries in the African and Eastern Mediterranean Regions.
Discussion
In many jurisdictions, air quality regulations defined PM2.5 as all particles smaller than 2.5 μm. This definition does not match the definition published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).3 Many regulatory documents referred simply to particle diameter rather than aerodynamic diameter, even though the definition of particle diameter as aerodynamic diameter is critical to the ISO definition of PM2.5. Various metrics exist for particle diameter besides aerodynamic diameter (detailed list in data repository).6,48,49 Therefore, regulations referring only to particle diameter without defining it introduce ambiguity. Jurisdictions can solve the problem by updating regulations with references to aerodynamic diameter specifically.
Some jurisdictions used a two-tier system of standards, such as different standards for commercial versus residential areas. One example of such a two-tier system is China, where a laxer standard was used in commercial zones where air pollution levels are generally higher, even though many people live next to China’s factories. Geographically uniform standards are more useful for protecting occupational and public health. However, China's current zone-based system may better protect vulnerable populations, such as children and the elderly in the residential zones, in a time of transition towards a geographically uniform standard.
Jurisdictions within nations may set subnational standards that are weaker than national standards. Canada is one example. The federal PM2.5 air quality standard was 8.8 µg/m3 (annual) and 27 µg/m3 (24-hour). Quebec and Ontario had their own 24-hour PM2.5 standards of 30 µg/m3, which prevailed over the federal standard. Quebec did not sign on to the federal annual PM2.5 standard. However, because air quality standards in Canada are voluntary and overwhelmingly met, no conflict exists.
Short-term standards, such as the 20-minute 160 µg/m3 PM2.5 standard in the Russian Federation, could be used in parallel with the annual and the 24-hour standards to reveal acute short-term spikes of PM2.5 concentrations. The use of such a short-term averaging period, but only when combined with an adequately strict PM2.5 concentration limit, can be useful in light of the current knowledge from controlled-exposure research on healthy adults that short-term exposures to high PM2.5 concentrations can cause adverse health effects.50,51
The PM2.5 fraction contributes the most to the total burden of disease from particulate air pollution exposure.4 In the past, jurisdictions with high ambient PM2.5 air pollution saw health and environmental benefits from the implementation of PM2.5 ambient air quality standards and measures to reduce PM2.5 exposure.52,53 However, many jurisdictions still do not regulate PM2.5 air pollution or still have standards that are far from the safer levels based on the evidence from epidemiological studies.9 Mechanistic studies found that the chemical composition of inhaled particles influences the biological effects these particles cause upon inhalation.54 However, health studies conducted to date have predominantly assessed the impact of the total mass of inhaled PM2.5 particles over time, irrespective of PM2.5 aerosol composition.55 Nevertheless, investing efforts into the total PM2.5 air pollution reduction may be more beneficial than regulating different PM2.5 air pollution components separately. An exception to this approach might be made in areas with strong natural dust sources, such as the Middle East, where monitoring and controlling anthropogenic source emissions could be more effective.
Standards and air quality monitoring data cannot be accurately compared between different jurisdictions when data collection and processing methods differ (different PM2.5 definitions, averaging periods, exceedances, percentiles). The differences in these metrics result in potential discrepancies between PM2.5 ambient air pollution levels and the values recorded and used to determine compliance with the standards. Currently, there is no universal set of metrics used in PM2.5 ambient air quality standards that would ensure comparability of monitoring data globally. Without a universal metric, the same absolute PM2.5 mass concentration limit can permit different levels of PM2.5 pollution. The temporal and spatial distributions of the absolute recorded levels of PM2.5 ambient air pollution are used in epidemiological studies and health risk assessment, where the differences in metrics can introduce errors. We suggest worldwide harmonization of the metrics of the PM2.5 air quality standards to achieve the same averaging methods and exceedance allowances, or phasing out of exceedance allowances. This harmonization of the metrics of the PM2.5 air quality standards may be achieved if the WHO guidelines specify a universal PM2.5 definition based on aerodynamic diameter, and establish a common averaging and data recording method.
Enforced, target or voluntary standards were used in different jurisdictions. The goal to achieve the target standards is generally political, where accountability between responsible government branches exists. There is no universal enforcement mechanism and no definition of enforcement in the case of target standards. Enforced standards function through the possibility that at least one responsible party will bear potential financial, administrative or other costs resulting from non-compliance. Unless standards are explicitly defined as voluntary, various types of costs of non-compliance are possible. Canada is a notable exception where PM2.5 ambient air quality standards were defined as voluntary. The voluntary PM2.5 air quality standards in Canada are uniquely associated with a robust, extensive network of air quality monitoring stations registering only rare local exceedances. Outside of this context, voluntary air quality standards may not be justified.
The success of strict ambient air quality standards in several densely populated jurisdictions demonstrates that high population density should not discourage the implementation of PM2.5 ambient air pollution reduction measures, including stricter PM2.5 ambient air quality standards.
The current 24-hour standards mask sharp PM2.5 concentration spikes over short periods of minutes to hours. Jurisdictions with a high temporal variability of PM2.5 concentration, such as in India and China, should consider short-term averaging (such as over 20 minutes or 1 hour) along with high percentiles (such as the 98th or 99th) of 1-hour arithmetic means to monitor and reduce short-term PM2.5 spikes.
Our study has some limitations. We could not confirm the existence of PM2.5 regulations in certain countries with high PM2.5 pollution and associated mortality, including Indonesia, Iraq, Myanmar, Nigeria, Sudan, Thailand and Turkey, even though PM10 or other standards may be in place and some jurisdictions without an identified standard might be using WHO guidelines. The Islamic Republic of Iran is an example of such a situation. The Iranian government’s environment department stated on their website that they are guided by the PM2.5 standards of the United States Environmental Protection Agency (the department could not be reached for comment). We also found recommendations in the government documents of some of these countries regarding the reduction of particulate emissions. Iranian authorities, for example, have recommendations for numerous interventions to reduce emissions, including limits on vehicle emissions, industry, open burning, cooking fuels and enforcement mechanisms. Also some jurisdictions might have had regulations that included PM2.5 that were not included in the analysis because they were not defined as PM2.5 or were not accessible to the authors due to the language barrier or other difficulties with access to information. Inaccessibility, along with our specific inclusion and exclusion criteria, and our data reflecting the standards in 2020, could have caused slight differences between our results and the WHO maps on air quality standards.56
In conclusion, to protect people's health from harmful PM2.5 air pollution, we suggest that regulatory agencies and governments adopt and regularly tighten PM2.5 ambient air quality standards. Where PM2.5 air quality often exceeds WHO guidelines, these standards should be enforced with clearly defined enforcement mechanisms. The standards must be stringent enough for each local level of PM2.5 ambient air pollution to drive meaningful air pollution reduction actions that are adequate and meaningful considering the level of PM2.5 ambient air pollution in a given jurisdiction. Governments and agencies must avoid using the arithmetic mean metric, which tends to conceal high-pollution episodes reducing governments’ ability to identify and remediate sources of PM2.5. We suggest that high percentiles should be used instead of the arithmetic mean.
Acknowledgements
Parisa A Ariya is also affiliated with the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, McGill University. We thank Nermin Eltouny, Ali Moridnejad and Allison P Patton.
Funding:
The study was funded by the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Environment and Climate Change Canada, and the Canadian Foundation for Innovation. Yevgen Nazarenko is supported by the Mitacs Elevate Fellowship.
Competing Interests:
None declared.
References
- 1.Nadadur SS, Hollingsworth JW, editors. Air pollution and health effects. London: Springer; 2015. . 10.1007/978-1-4471-6669-6 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
- 2.Air pollution and cancer. Lyon: International Agency for Research on Cancer; 2013. [Google Scholar]
- 3.ISO 7708:1995. Air quality – particle size fraction definitions for health-related sampling. Geneva: International Organization for Standardization; 1995. Available from: https://www.iso.org/standard/14534.html [cited 2019 Aug 3].
- 4.Cohen AJ, Brauer M, Burnett R, Anderson HR, Frostad J, Estep K, et al. Estimates and 25-year trends of the global burden of disease attributable to ambient air pollution: an analysis of data from the Global Burden of Diseases Study 2015. Lancet. 2017. May 13;389(10082):1907–18. 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)30505-6 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 5.Giannadaki D, Lelieveld J, Pozzer A. Implementing the US air quality standard for PM2.5 worldwide can prevent millions of premature deaths per year. Environ Health. 2016. August 23;15(1):88. 10.1186/s12940-016-0170-8 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 6.Nazarenko Y, Pal D, Ariya PA. Supplementary webappendix: Air quality standards for the concentration of particulate matter 2.5, global descriptive analysis. [data repository]. Geneva: Zenodo; 2020. 10.5281/zenodo.4127176 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 7.Total population by country [internet]. Walnut: World Population Review; 2019. Available from: http://worldpopulationreview.com [cited 2019 Jan 25].
- 8.Annual mean concentration of particulate matter of less than 2.5 microns of diameter (PM2.5) [ug/m3] in urban areas [internet]. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2016. Available from: https://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.wrapper.imr?x-id=4674 [cited 2019 Aug 3].
- 9.WHO Air quality guidelines for particulate matter, ozone, nitrogen dioxide and sulfur dioxide. Global update 2005. Summary of risk assessment. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2006. Available from: https://www.who.int/airpollution/publications/aqg2005/en/ [cited 2020 Nov 16].
- 10.National ambient air quality standard for particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 micron metres (PM2.5). Pretoria: Department of Environmental Affairs of the Government of South Africa; 2012. Available from: https://www.gov.za/sites/default/files/gcis_document/201409/35463gon486.pdf [cited 2020 Nov 20].
- 11.Air quality in Latin America: an overview. Washington, DC: The Clean Air Institute; 2012. [Google Scholar]
- 12.Canadian ambient air quality standards (CAAQS) for PM2.5, O3, SO2 and NO2 [internet]. Winnipeg: Canadian Council of Ministers of the Environment; 2020. Available from: http://airquality-qualitedelair.ccme.ca/en/ [cited 2020 Nov 20].
- 13.Quebec standards and criteria for atmospheric quality, version 52016 [internet]. Quebec: Ministry of the Environment and the Fight against Climate Change; 2020. French. Available from: http://www.environnement.gouv.qc.ca/air/criteres/index.htm [cited 2020 Nov 20].
- 14.Ontario's ambient air quality criteria. Toronto: Standards Development Branch of the Ontario Ministry of the Environment; 2012; Available from: http://www.airqualityontario.com/downloads/AmbientAirQualityCriteria.pdf [cited 2020 Nov 20].
- 15.Decree 12, publication date May 9, 2011, Ministry of the Environment, establishes primary standard of environmental quality for fine breathable particulate matter PM2.5 Santiago: Ministry of the Environment of Chile; 2011. Spanish. Available from: https://www.leychile.cl/Navegar?idNorma=1025202 [cited 2018 Feb 27].
- 16.Official Mexican STANDARD NOM-025-SSA1-2014, Environmental health. Permissible limit values for the concentration of suspended particles PM10 and PM2.5 in ambient air and criteria for their evaluation. Mexico City: Secretary of Health of the United Mexican States; 2014. Spanish. Available from: http://siga.jalisco.gob.mx/aire/normas/NOM-025-SSA1-2014.pdf [cited 2020 Nov 20].
- 17.Kutlar Joss M, Eeftens M, Gintowt E, Kappeler R, Künzli N. Time to harmonize national ambient air quality standards. Int J Public Health. 2017. May;62(4):453–62. 10.1007/s00038-017-0952-y [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 18.National ambient air quality standards for particulate matter. Washington, DC: United States Environmental Protection Agency; 2013. pp. 3085–287. [Google Scholar]
- 19.NAAQS table [internet]. Washington: United States Environmental Protection Agency; 2016. Available from: https://www.epa.gov/criteria-air-pollutants/naaqs-table [cited 2018 Feb 27].
- 20.Country synthesis report on urban air quality management Bangladesh. Tokyo: Asian Development Bank and the Clean Air Initiative for Asian Cities Center; 2006. [Google Scholar]
- 21.National ambient air quality standards. New Delhi: Central Pollution Control Board of the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change of the Government of India; 2009. Available from: http://cpcb.nic.in/air-quality-standard/ [cited 2018 Feb 27].
- 22.Air quality standards. Brussels: European Commission; 2017. Available from: https://ec.europa.eu/environment/air/quality/standards.htm [cited 2018 Feb 27].
- 23.Additional support of the Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources of Ukraine in the implementation of Sectoral Budget Support. Atmospheric air quality: a brief description of EU Directives and schedule for their implementation]. Kyiv: Association of Engineers-Consultants of Ukraine; 2015. Ukrainian. Available from: http://www.if.gov.ua/files/uploads/%D1%8F%D0%BA%D1%96%D1%81%D1%82%D1%8C%20%D0%B0%D1%82%D0%BC%D0%BE%D1%81%D1%84%D0%B5%D1%80%D0%BD%D0%BE%D0%B3%D0%BE%20%D0%BF%D0%BE%D0%B2%D1%96%D1%82%D1%80%D1%8F.pdf [cited 2018 Mar 08].
- 24.Chapter 7: Local air quality regulations relating to pollution control. Pollution regulations. Oslo: Norwegian Environment Agency; 2012. [Google Scholar]
- 25.Chief Government Sanitary Physician of the Russian Federation. [Resolution of the Chief State Sanitary Doctor of the Russian Federation of December 22, 2017 Nº 165 “On approval of hygienic standards GN 2.1.6.3492-17” Maximum allowable concentrations (MAC) of pollutants in the air of urban and rural settlements.] Moscow: Federal Office of Monitoring in Consumer Rights Protection and Human Well-Being; 2018. Russian. [Google Scholar]
- 26.Ordinance on Air Pollution Control (OAPC) of 16 December 1985. 814.318.142.1. Bern: Swiss Federal Council; 2018. Available from: https://www.admin.ch/opc/en/classified-compilation/19850321/index.html [cited 2020 Nov 20].
- 27.[Decision of the President of the Council of Ministers.] Cairo: Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency of the Ministry of Environment of the Arab Republic of Egypt; 2012. Arabic. [Google Scholar]
- 28.Country synthesis report on urban air quality management Pakistan. Manila: Asian Development Bank and the Clean Air Initiative for Asian Cities Center; 2006. [Google Scholar]
- 29.Niaz Y, Zhou J, Nasir A, Iqbal M, Dong B. Comparative study of particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5) in Dalian-China and Faisalabad-Pakistan. Pak J Agric Sci. 2016;53(1):97–106. 10.21162/PAKJAS/16.3623 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
- 30.Royal Commission environmental regulations. Al Jubail: Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu; 2004. Available from: https://www.rcjy.gov.sa/ar-SA/Jubail/Citizen/Environment/Documents/RCER_2004_Regulations.pdf [cited 2018 Feb 27].
- 31.National standards for criteria air pollutants1 in Australia. Canberra: Department of the Environment and Heritage of the Australian Government; 2005. [Google Scholar]
- 32.[Ambient air quality standards.] Beijing: Ministry of Environmental Protection of the People’s Republic of China; 2016. Chinese. [Google Scholar]
- 33.Clean air action plan. Taipei: Environmental Protection Administration Executive Yuan; 2015. Chinese. Available from: http://www.igreentech.url.tw/data/documents/CleanAir_2015_2020.pdf [cited 2018 Feb 27].
- 34.Hong Kong’s air quality objectives. Hong Kong: Environmental Protection Department of the Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region; 2017. Available from: https://www.epd.gov.hk/epd/english/environmentinhk/air/air_quality_objectives/air_quality_objectives.html [cited 2018 Feb 27].
- 35.A clean air plan for Hong Kong. Hong Kong: Environment Bureau in collaboration with Transport & Housing Bureau, Food & Health Bureau, Development Bureau; 2013. p. 39. [Google Scholar]
- 36.Environmental quality standards in Japan – air quality [internet]. Tokyo: Ministry of the Environment, Government of Japan; 2009. Available from: http://www.env.go.jp/en/air/aq/aq.html [cited 2018 Feb 27].
- 37.Enforcement Decree of the Framework Act on Environmental Policy [internet]. Seoul: Ministry of Environment of the Republic of Korea; 2017. Available from: http://extwprlegs1.fao.org/docs/pdf/kor70360.pdf [cited 2018 Feb 27].
- 38.Air quality standards and air pollution level. Seoul: Ministry of Environment of the Republic of Korea; 2017. [Google Scholar]
- 39.Clean Air Conservation Act. [Enforcement Date 21 Jul, 2015.] [Act No.13034, 20. Jan, 2015, Partial Amendment]. Seoul: Ministry of Environment of the Republic of Korea; 2015. p. 100.
- 40.Shin, JS. Supplying 200,000 electric vehicles for 5 years. Reinforcing standards for ultrafine dust and expanding nature protected areas. Seoul: Green Post Korea; 2016. Korean. Available from: http://www.greenpostkorea.co.kr/news/articleView.html?idxno=55298 [cited 2018 Feb 27].
- 41.Factsheet on more measures to improve Singapore’s air quality. Singapore: Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources of the National Environment Agency of Singapore; 2015. Available from: https://www.mewr.gov.sg/docs/default-source/default-document-library/cos-2015-media-factsheet---spore-39-s-air-quality.pdf [cited 2018 Mar 8].
- 42.Air quality and targets. Singapore: National Environment Agency of the Singapore Government; 2017. Available from: https://www.nea.gov.sg/our-services/pollution-control/air-pollution/air-quality [cited 2018 Mar 8].
- 43.National regulation on ambient air QCVN 05/2013/BTNMT. Hanoi: Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment of Vietnam; 2013. Available from: https://hoabinhxanh.vn/qcvn-052013-btnmt-quy-chuan-chat-luong-khong-khi-xung-quanh/ [cited 2018 Feb 27].
- 44.Air quality standards [internet]. Brussels: European Commission; 2016 Available from: https://ec.europa.eu/environment/air/quality/standards.htm [cited 2016 Nov 16].
- 45.Koltsov M, Shevchenko L. [Atmospheric air quality monitoring: Ukrainian and international experience.] Kyiv: Open Society Foundation; 2018. Ukrainian. [Google Scholar]
- 46.Moridnejad A, Karimi N, Ariya PA. A new inventory for Middle East dust source points. Environ Monit Assess. 2015. September;187(9):582. 10.1007/s10661-015-4806-x [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 47.Moridnejad A, Karimi N, Ariya PA. Newly desertified regions in Iraq and its surrounding areas: Significant novel sources of global dust particles. J Arid Environ. 2015;116:1–10. 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2015.01.008 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
- 48.Hinds WC. Aerosol technology: properties, behaviour, and measurement of airborne particles. 2nd ed. New York: John Wiley; 1999. 483 pp. [Google Scholar]
- 49.Kouimtzis T, Biegalski S, Samara C, Colbeck I, Holländer W, Koutrakis P, et al. Airborne particulate matter. Heidelberg: Springer Verlag; 2013. [Google Scholar]
- 50.Pope CA 3rd, Dockery DW. Health effects of fine particulate air pollution: lines that connect. J Air Waste Manag Assoc. 2006. June;56(6):709–42. 10.1080/10473289.2006.10464485 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 51.Gong H Jr, Linn WS, Sioutas C, Terrell SL, Clark KW, Anderson KR, et al. Controlled exposures of healthy and asthmatic volunteers to concentrated ambient fine particles in Los Angeles. Inhal Toxicol. 2003. April 11;15(4):305–25. 10.1080/08958370304455 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 52.McGranahan G, Murray F. Air pollution and health in rapidly developing countries. Abingdon: Routledge; 2012. 10.4324/9781849770460 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
- 53.Pope CA 3rd, Cropper M, Coggins J, Cohen A. Health benefits of air pollution abatement policy: role of the shape of the concentration-response function. J Air Waste Manag Assoc. 2015. May;65(5):516–22. 10.1080/10962247.2014.993004 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 54.Valavanidis A, Fiotakis K, Vlachogianni T. Airborne particulate matter and human health: toxicological assessment and importance of size and composition of particles for oxidative damage and carcinogenic mechanisms. J Environ Sci Health Part C Environ Carcinog Ecotoxicol Rev. 2008. Oct-Dec;26(4):339–62. 10.1080/10590500802494538 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 55.Delfino RJ, Sioutas C, Malik S. Potential role of ultrafine particles in associations between airborne particle mass and cardiovascular health. Environ Health Perspect. 2005. August;113(8):934–46. 10.1289/ehp.7938 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 56.National air quality standards [internet]. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2019. Available from: https://whoairquality.shinyapps.io/AirQualityStandards/ [cited 2020 Oct 25].