Air Monitoring in North Denver (CAG Overview) Environmental Quality - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Air Monitoring in North Denver (CAG Overview) Environmental Quality - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Air Monitoring in North Denver (CAG Overview) Environmental Quality Division Department of Public Health & Environment July 17, 2018 Denvers s N Nationally lly A Accredited P Publi lic H Healt lth D h Department CONNECT WITH


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Denver’s ’s N Nationally lly A Accredited P Publi lic H Healt lth D h Department CONNECT WITH US 311 | POCKETGOV | DENVERGOV.ORG | DENVER 8 TV

Air Monitoring in North Denver (CAG Overview)

Environmental Quality Division Department of Public Health & Environment July 17, 2018

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Requested Discussion Topics

► Overview of monitoring ► Air monitoring data network management

► Swansea Air Monitoring Data

► Elevated Pollution Days

► Labor Day weekend 2017 (Sept 4 in particular) ► November 10, 2017 ► January 4, 2018 ► February 22, 2018

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Projects Overview

 Globeville Landing Outfall  Central 70  OU1, OU2, OU3  Four air quality monitoring projects

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Swansea Air Monitoring Station

Goal: Develop a better understanding of ongoing cumulative air quality impacts associated with major highway construction

Measures Pollutants:

CO, NOx, PM2.5, PM10, Black Carbon, VOC’s

Frequency: Minute for criteria pollutants, 5 min BC, 30 min VOC’s

Collaborators:

Denver Department of Public Health & Environment

Colorado Department of Transportation

Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment

Schedule:

Start: April 1, 2017

End: 1 year after end of construction (there will be future phases during and after construction)

425 ft 260 ft

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Network Management

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Data – PM Focus

PM10 STD PM2.5 STD

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CO NO2 PM2.5 PM10 BC

Report View

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Elevated Pollution Days

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Elevated Pollution Days in Denver

Key ingredients

  • In Denver’s case, river valley next to mountains
  • Cold air is more dense and sinks into the valley
  • Temperature inversions (occur year round, strongest in fall

and winter)

  • Clear skies (night) or high clouds (day) that partially block the

sun

  • Light or stagnant winds
  • Wildfire smoke (summer and fall)
  • Enough terrain variation in Metro Denver that high pollution is

frequently but not always Metro-wide

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Temperature Inversions

  • Inversions act as a lid on the atmosphere
  • With surface heating after sunrise,

inversions usually break by mid morning

  • Mobile source pollution gets trapped

below the inversion

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High Pollution Days over Past 12 Months

  • Labor Day weekend 2017 (Sept 4 in particular)
  • November 10, 2017
  • January 4, 2018
  • February 22, 2018
  • Without wildfire impacts, PM levels greatest in winter, followed by

fall, summer, and spring in that order

  • Need to evaluate regional monitors to determine if it is a regional or

local event

  • Visibility cameras and new satellite images are helpful as well
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September 4, 2017 (Labor Day)

  • Heavy smoke from Pacific NW

wildfires

  • Impacts over entire weekend
  • Peaked on Labor Day behind

a dry cold front

  • Due to holiday, clearly not a

mobile or industrial source driven event

  • All 4 GLO monitors high as

well

  • Regional impact from Fort

Collins to Chatfield

Longmont Boulder Chatfield

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Sept 4, 2017 (Labor Day) – Wildfire Smoke

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Sept 4 2017(Labor Day)– Visibility Camera

Can’t see the mountains!

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November 10, 2017

  • All day inversion
  • Greater impacts in the

S Platte River valley from Denver-Greeley

  • Greeley 24-hr Avg = 35

(not shown on map)

  • Typical urban pollution

sources all contributing

Longmont Boulder Chatfield

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Nov 10 2017– Visibility Camera

Can barely see the mountains; highest PM near the surface

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January 8, 2018

  • All day inversion
  • Highs temps mid 40s
  • Greatest impacts in the S

Platte River valley Denver- Greeley

  • Greeley 24-hr Avg = 35 (not

shown on map)

  • Boulder, Longmont, and

Chatfield are not in the inversion or as long

  • High clouds all day until ~2 pm
  • Sun could not heat surface

and erode the inversion

Longmont Boulder Chatfield

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Jan 8 2018 – Visibility Camera

Strong, shallow inversion impacting ground level monitors.

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February 22, 2018

  • All day inversion
  • Greatest impacts in the S

Platte River valley from Chatfield-Greeley

  • Greeley 24-hr Avg = 30 (not

shown on map)

  • High temps low-mid 20’s
  • Cloudier as day went on
  • Light snow by 4 pm
  • Sun could not heat surface

and erode the inversion

Longmont Boulder Chatfield

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Feb 22 2018 – Visibility Camera

Cant see the mountains, 60% humidity and aerosols (PM) making for ext. poor visibility