Mapping urban air pollution in data-scarce areas using GIS and Satellite data
Peržiūrėti/ Atidaryti
Data
2026Autorius
Chiappini, Alessandra
Passerini, Giorgio
Metaduomenys
Rodyti detalų aprašąSantrauka
Assessing air quality in urban areas is often challenging, especially in areas where ground-based monitoring
networks are scarce or even absent. Due to local policies or limited resources, many areas in Italy lack continuous
environmental monitoring over time and space.
To overcome this problem, in this study, we offer a practical GIS-based workflow to help make initial air pollution assessments
when data is limited. Using the Sorrento Peninsula in Italy as case study, we implement the workflow, using
a mix of satellite data and site-specific geolocalized data, to map out where key pollutants like nitrogen dioxide (NO2)
and fine particulate matter (PM2.5) are found across the area.
The method brings together data on NO2 in the lower atmosphere from the Sentinel-5P TROPOMI sensor and PM2.5
estimates that come from measuring aerosol optical depth (AOD). We process all this information using QGIS and
overlay it with other useful maps, like roads and ferry routes from OpenStreetMap, port locations, land use, and urbanization.
By layering these details, we can spot pollution hotspots and better understand how city life and seasonal
tourism (strong in the study area), like heavy road traffic or busy ports, influence air quality.
The results show that GIS satellite mapping provides a continuous spatial approximation of air quality, effectively identifying
key areas in locations with limited or no in-situ monitoring. This workflow is replicable and can sustain environmental
agencies and urban planners with a cost-effective tool for early hotspot detection and urban exposure assessment
to inhance policy support and monitoring strategies in Data-sparse environments.
Paskelbimo data (metai)
2026Autorius
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