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Found 10066 publications. Showing page 47 of 403:

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Deployment and Evaluation of Networks of Open Air Quality Sensor Systems - Experiences from deployments in Stavanger and Oslo

Schneider, Philipp; Vogt, Matthias; Haugen, Rolf; Hassani, Amirhossein; Castell, Nuria; Peters, Jan; Yatkin, Sinan; Gerboles, Michel; Matheeussen, Christina; Davila, Silvije; Signorini, Marco; Dauge, Franck Rene; Skaar, Jøran Solnes; Bartonova, Alena

2023

Local pollution in Svalbard - Whereabouts of anthropogenic particles in an Arctic fjord system

Philipp, Carolin; Collard, France; Husum, Katrine; Halsband, Claudia; Herzke, Dorte; Corami, Fabiana; Gabrielsen, Geir Wing; Hallanger, Ingeborg G.

2023

A regional modelling study of halogen chemistry within a volcanic plume of Mt Etna's Christmas 2018 eruption

Narivelo, Herizo; Hamer, Paul David; Marécal, Virginie; Surl, Luke; Roberts, Tjarda; Pelletier, Sophie; Josse, Béatrice; Guth, Jonathan; Bacles, Mickaël; Warnach, Simon; Wagner, Thomas; Corradini, Stefano; Salerno, Giuseppe; Guerrieri, Lorenzo

Volcanoes are known to be important emitters of atmospheric gases and aerosols, which for certain volcanoes can include halogen gases and in particular HBr. HBr emitted in this way can undergo rapid atmospheric oxidation chemistry (known as the bromine explosion) within the volcanic emission plume, leading to the production of bromine oxide (BrO) and ozone depletion. In this work, we present the results of a modelling study of a volcanic eruption from Mt Etna that occurred around Christmas 2018 and lasted 6 d. The aims of this study are to demonstrate and evaluate the ability of the regional 3D chemistry transport model Modèle de Chimie Atmosphérique de Grande Echelle (MOCAGE) to simulate the volcanic halogen chemistry in this case study, to analyse the variability of the chemical processes during the plume transport, and to quantify its impact on the composition of the troposphere at a regional scale over the Mediterranean basin.

The comparison of the tropospheric SO2 and BrO columns from 25 to 30 December 2018 from the MOCAGE simulation with the columns derived from the TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) satellite measurements shows a very good agreement for the transport of the plume and a good consistency for the concentrations if considering the uncertainties in the flux estimates and the TROPOMI columns. The analysis of the bromine species' partitioning and of the associated chemical reaction rates provides a detailed picture of the simulated bromine chemistry throughout the diurnal cycle and at different stages of the volcanic plume's evolution. The partitioning of the bromine species is modulated by the time evolution of the emissions during the 6 d of the eruption; by the meteorological conditions; and by the distance of the plume from the vent, which is equivalent to the time since the emission. As the plume travels further from the vent, the halogen source gas HBr becomes depleted, BrO production in the plume becomes less efficient, and ozone depletion (proceeding via the Br+O3 reaction followed by the BrO self-reaction) decreases. The depletion of HBr relative to the other prevalent hydracid HCl leads to a shift in the relative concentrations of the Br− and Cl− ions, which in turn leads to reduced production of Br2 relative to BrCl.

The MOCAGE simulations show a regional impact of the volcanic eruption on the oxidants OH and O3 with a reduced burden of both gases that is caused by the chemistry in the volcanic plume. This reduction in atmospheric oxidation capacity results in a reduced CH4 burden. Finally, sensitivity tests on the composition of the emissions carried out in this work show that the production of BrO is higher when the volcanic emissions of sulfate aerosols are increased but occurs very slowly when no sulfate and Br radicals are assumed to be in the emissions. Both sensitivity tests highlight a significant impact on the oxidants in the troposphere at the regional scale of these assumptions.

All the results of this modelling study, in particular the rapid formation of BrO, which leads to a significant loss of tropospheric ozone, are consistent with previous studies carried out on the modelling of volcanic halogens.

2023

Screening Programme 2022. New environmental pollutants.

Gundersen, Cathrine Brecke; Reid, Malcolm; Rostkowski, Pawel; Bæk, Kine; Rundberget, Thomas; Vogelsang, Christian; Rødland, Elisabeth; Beylich, Bjørnar; Eikenes, Heidi; Bäcklund, Are; Walker, Sam-Erik; Borgen, Anders Røsrud; Nikiforov, Vladimir; Håland, Alexander; Schmidbauer, Norbert

The 2022 Screening Programme followed up on some findings from the 2020 Screening Programme. This included further
investigation of plastic-related substances, tyre-related substances, and disinfection agents. The 2022 Programme also included
additional new PFAS, bisphenols, and new siloxanes.

Norsk institutt for vannforskning (NIVA)

2023

Vurdering av miljøgifter i kanaliserte utslipp til luft ved Metallco NMF

Weydahl, Torleif; Halvorsen, Helene Lunder; Heimstad, Eldbjørg Sofie

NILU

2023

Nature-based and solar energy building solutions in the water-energy-food nexus across diverse climatic zones in Europe

Karamanis, Dimitris; Liu, Hai Ying; Skandalos, Nikolaos; D’Agostino, Delia; Kourtis, Ioannis M.; Vangelis, Harris

2023

Opportunities for improving the circularity of plastic polymers. A Norwegian case study.

Hernandez, Miguel Las Heras; Abbasi, Golnoush; Hauser, Marina Jennifer; Balde, Kees; Bouman, Evert Alwin

2023

A life-cycle perspective on the benefits of renewable electricity generation in the EU27

Bouman, Evert Alwin; Barre, Francis Isidore; Booto, Gaylord Kabongo; Ebrahimi, Babak

2023

Environmental pollutants in the terrestrial and urban environment 2022

Heimstad, Eldbjørg Sofie; Moe, Børge; Borgen, Anders; Enge, Ellen Katrin; Nordang, Unni Mette; Bæk, Kine; Nipen, Maja; Harju, Mikael; Hanssen, Linda

Samples of soil, earthworm, fieldfare egg, brown rat liver, spanish slug, house dust and cat liver from the urban terrestrial environment in the Oslo area were analysed for several different groups of environmental pollutants. Biota-soil accumulation was calculated from soil to earthworm from the same location, and biomagnification-potential was estimated based on detected data for relevant predator-prey pairs from the same location.

NILU

2023

Evaluation of TROPOMI observations for estimating surface NO2 concentrations over Europe using XGBoost Model

Shetty, Shobitha; Schneider, Philipp; Stebel, Kerstin; Kylling, Arve; Berntsen, Terje Koren; Hamer, Paul David

2023

Solkrem er viktigst akkurat nå

Solbakken, Christine Forsetlund

2023

Mapping and Visualizing Air Quality

Hassani, Amirhossein; Schneider, Philipp

2023

Status of Earth Observation and Remote Sensing Applications in Svalbard

Jawak, Shridhar D.; Pohjola, Veijo; Kääb, Andreas Max; Andersen, Bo Nyborg; Błaszczyk, Małgorzata; Salzano, Roberto; Luks, Bartlomiej; Enomoto, Hiroyuki; Høgda, Kjell Arild; Moholdt, Geir; Dinessen, Frode; Fjæraa, Ann Mari

2023

Tips og triks for å vinne støvkrigen hjemme

Bohlin-Nizzetto, Pernilla (interview subject); Lilleås, Vegard (journalist)

2023

Could Norway supply its own fertilizer? A high-resolution analysis of the agricultural phosphorus cycle

Hernandez, Miguel Las Heras; Barre, Francis Isidore; Dittrich, Nils Maximilian; Pandit, Avijit Vinayak; Øgaard, Anne Falk; Müller, Daniel B.

2023

A roadmap to estimating agricultural ammonia volatilization over Europe using satellite observations and simulation data

Abeed, Rimal; Viatte, Camille; Porter, William C.; Evangeliou, Nikolaos; Clerbaux, Cathy; Clarisse, Lieven; Damme, Martin Van; Coheur, Pierre-François; Safieddine, Sarah

Ammonia (NH3) is one of the most important gases emitted from agricultural practices. It affects air quality and the overall climate and is in turn influenced by long-term climate trends as well as by short-term fluctuations in local and regional meteorology. Previous studies have established the capability of the Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI) series of instruments, aboard the Metop satellites, to measure ammonia from space since 2007. In this study, we explore the interactions between atmospheric ammonia, land and meteorological variability, and long-term climate trends in Europe. We investigate the emission potential (Γsoil) of ammonia from the soil, which describes the soil–atmosphere ammonia exchange. Γsoil is generally calculated in-field or in laboratory experiments; here, and for the first time, we investigate a method which assesses it remotely using satellite data, reanalysis data products, and model simulations.

We focus on ammonia emission potential in March 2011, which marks the start of growing season in Europe. Our results show that Γsoil ranges from 2 × 103 to 9.5 × 104 (dimensionless) in fertilized cropland, such as in the North European Plain, and is of the order of 10–102 in a non-fertilized soil (e.g., forest and grassland). These results agree with in-field measurements from the literature, suggesting that our method can be used in other seasons and regions in the world. However, some improvements are needed in the determination of mass transfer coefficient k (m s−1), which is a crucial parameter to derive Γsoil.

Using a climate model, we estimate the expected increase in ammonia columns by the end of the century based on the increase in skin temperature (Tskin), under two different climate scenarios. Ammonia columns are projected to increase by up to 50 %, particularly in eastern Europe, under the SSP2-4.5 scenario and might even double (increase of 100 %) under the SSP5-8.5 scenario. The increase in skin temperature is responsible for a formation of new hotspots of ammonia in Belarus, Ukraine, Hungary, Moldova, parts of Romania, and Switzerland.

2023

New approach methodologies to facilitate and improve the hazard assessment of non-genotoxic carcinogens—a PARC project

Audebert, Marc; Assmann, Ann-Sophie; Azqueta, Amaya; Babica, Pavel; Benfenati, Emilio; Bortoli, Sylvie; Bouwman, Peter; Braeuning, Albert; Burgdorf, Tanja; Coumoul, Xavier; Debizet, Kloé; Dusinska, Maria; Ertych, Norman; Fahrer, Jörg; Fetz, Verena; Hegarat, Ludovic Le; Cerain, Adela López de; Heusinkveld, Harm J.; Hogeveen, Kevin; Jacobs, Miriam N.; Luijten, Mirjam; Raitano, Giuseppa; Recoules, Cynthia; Rundén-Pran, Elise; Saleh, Mariam; Sovadinova, Iva; Stampar, Martina; Thibol, Lea; Tomkiewicz, Céline; Vettorazzi, Ariane; Water, Bob van de; Yamani, Naouale El; Zegura, Bojana; Oelgeschläger, Michael

Carcinogenic chemicals, or their metabolites, can be classified as genotoxic or non-genotoxic carcinogens (NGTxCs). Genotoxic compounds induce DNA damage, which can be detected by an established in vitro and in vivo battery of genotoxicity assays. For NGTxCs, DNA is not the primary target, and the possible modes of action (MoA) of NGTxCs are much more diverse than those of genotoxic compounds, and there is no specific in vitro assay for detecting NGTxCs. Therefore, the evaluation of the carcinogenic potential is still dependent on long-term studies in rodents. This 2-year bioassay, mainly applied for testing agrochemicals and pharmaceuticals, is time-consuming, costly and requires very high numbers of animals. More importantly, its relevance for human risk assessment is questionable due to the limited predictivity for human cancer risk, especially with regard to NGTxCs. Thus, there is an urgent need for a transition to new approach methodologies (NAMs), integrating human-relevant in vitro assays and in silico tools that better exploit the current knowledge of the multiple processes involved in carcinogenesis into a modern safety assessment toolbox. Here, we describe an integrative project that aims to use a variety of novel approaches to detect the carcinogenic potential of NGTxCs based on different mechanisms and pathways involved in carcinogenesis. The aim of this project is to contribute suitable assays for the safety assessment toolbox for an efficient and improved, internationally recognized hazard assessment of NGTxCs, and ultimately to contribute to reliable mechanism-based next-generation risk assessment for chemical carcinogens.

2023

Spatial distribution of Dechlorane Plus and dechlorane related compounds in European background air

Skogeng, Lovise Pedersen; Halvorsen, Helene Lunder; Breivik, Knut; Eckhardt, Sabine; Herzke, Dorte; Möckel, Claudia; Krogseth, Ingjerd Sunde

The highly chlorinated chemical Dechlorane Plus (DP) was introduced as a replacement flame retardant for Mirex, which is banned through the Stockholm Convention (SC) for its toxicity (T), environmental persistence (P), potential for bioaccumulation (B) and long-range environmental transport potential (LRETP). Currently, Dechlorane Plus is under consideration for listing under the Stockholm Convention and by the European Chemical Agency as it is suspected to also have potential for P, B, T and LRET. Knowledge of atmospheric concentrations of chemicals in background regions is vital to understand their persistence and long-range atmospheric transport but such knowledge is still limited for Dechlorane Plus. Also, knowledge on environmental occurrence of the less described Dechlorane Related Compounds (DRCs), with similar properties and uses as Dechlorane Plus, is limited. Hence, the main objective of this study was to carry out a spatial mapping of atmospheric concentrations of Dechlorane Plus and Dechlorane Related Compounds at background sites in Europe. Polyurethane foam passive air samplers were deployed at 99 sites across 33 European countries for 3 months in summer 2016 and analyzed for dechloranes. The study showed that syn- and anti-DP are present across the European continent...

2023

Convention on long-range transboundary air pollution. UN/ECE international operative programme on effects on materials, including historic and cultural monuments. Environmental data report. October 2020 to December 2021

Grøntoft, Terje; Roux, Marta Segura

This report presents the ICP Materials database for the period October 2020 to December 2021. It includes environmental data from the ICP Materials trend exposure programme for 2020 - 2021 and, in addition, data for temperature, relative
humidity, and precipitation amount back to the end of the previous annual exposure programme in October/November 2018. The database consists of meteorological data (T, RH and precipitation amount) and pollution data: Gas concentrations, amounts of ions in precipitation, particle concentrations and amounts of particle deposition.

NILU

2023

Development of an AOP-based IATA for genotoxicity

Demuynck, E.; Vanhaecke, T.; Thienpont, A.; Rogiers, V.; Winkelman, L. M. T.; Beltman, Joost B.; Reus, A.; Marcon, F.; Bossa, C.; Peijnenburg, A.; Machera, K.; Nikolopoulou, D.; Hatzi, V.; Paparella, M.; Kohl, Y.; Narui, Shan; Mollerup, Steen Kristen; Dusinska, Maria; Runden-Pran, E.; Yamani, Naouale El; Longhin, Eleonora Marta; Svendsen, Camilla; Gutleb, Arno; Pennings, J.; Luijten, Mirjam; Adam-Guillermin, Christelle; Laurent, O.; Armant, O.; Pachoulide, C.; Bouwmeester, Hans; Raitano, G.; Benfenati, Emilio; Wyrzykowska, E.; Stepnik, M.; Puzyn, T.; Audebert, Marc; Mertens, Birgit

2023

Analysis of nitro- and oxy-PAH emissions from a pilot scale silicon process with flue gas recirculation

Arnesen, Kamilla; Andersen, Vegar; Jakovljevic, Katarina; Enge, Ellen Katrin; Gaertner, Heiko; Aarhaug, Thor Anders; Einarsrud, Kristian Etienne; Tranell, Maria Gabriella

Silicon alloys are produced by carbothermic reduction of quartz in a submerged arc furnace. This high-temperature pyrolytic process is a source of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which are a group of aromatic organic molecules with known mutagenic and carcinogenic properties. In this study, the emission of oxy- and nitro-PAHs from a pilot-scale Si furnace, with varying process conditions such as oxygen level, flue gas recirculation (FGR), and off-gas flow, was investigated. Analysis shows the presence of both oxy- and nitro-PAH species in all experiments, believed to be formed from radical-induced substitution reactions initiated by SiO combustion and NOx formation. During Si production without FGR, the levels of oxy- and nitro-PAHs range between 1.1 and 4.4 μg Nm−3, independent of the flue gas flow rate. With increasing FGR (0–82.5%) and decreasing oxygen level (20.7–13.3%), the concentrations of both oxy- and nitro-PAHs increase to 36.6 and 65.9 μg Nm−3, respectively. When the levels of substituted PAHs increase, species such as 4-nitropyrene and 1,2-benzanthraquinone are in abundance compared to their parent PAHs. Experiments at lower flue gas flow (500 Nm3 h−1 versus 1000 Nm3 h−1) generally produce less substituted PAHs, as well as SiO2 particulate matter and NOx, where the latter two parameters have a 99% correlation in this study.

2023

SDGs at the halfway point: How the 17 global goals address risks and wicked problems

Pedersen, Anders Branth; Hickmann, Thomas; Renn, Ortwin; Eckert, Nicolas; Jax, Kurt; Lepenies, Robert; Liu, Hai Ying; Lyytimäki, Jari; Reis, Stefan; Rusch, Graciela

2023

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