Difference between revisions of "Impacts of Roadway Emissions on urban particulate matter concnetrations in sub-Saharan Africa"

From Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 9: Line 9:
 
|DocumentNumber=1
 
|DocumentNumber=1
 
|SubmittedDate=2009/09/30
 
|SubmittedDate=2009/09/30
|Description=the lack of ambient monitoring data, and particularly urban roadside concentrations for particulate matter in SSA cities severely hinders our ability to describe temporal and spatial patterns of concentrations, characterize exposure–response relationships  
+
|Description=the lack of ambient monitoring data, and particularly urban roadside concentrations for particulate matter in SSA cities severely hinders our ability to describe temporal and spatial patterns of concentrations, characterize exposure–response relationships
 
|Parameters=NO ambient monitoring. NEDDS PM2.5, black carbon
 
|Parameters=NO ambient monitoring. NEDDS PM2.5, black carbon
|TemporalResolution=NEEDS  
+
|SpatialResolution=NEEDS  
spatial  and temporal monitoring in
+
SubSahran Africa, 45 countries, only 7 countries have some monitoring, South Africa has most extensive AQ monitoring
 
}}
 
}}
[[Category:CandidateDoc]]
+
[[Category:CandidateDoc]][[Category:CitedDoc]]

Latest revision as of 20:57, October 20, 2009

< GEO User Requirements for Air Quality | Report | Documents | Resources | Edit with Form
Doc #: 1 Title: Impacts of Roadway Emissions on urban particulate matter concnetrations in sub-Saharan Africa: new evidence from Nairobi Kenya | Document Link
Organization/Author: E D S van Vliet and P L Kinney1
Type: "Journal Article" is not in the list (Report, Workshop, Paper, Website, Presentation, Legislation, Other) of allowed values for the "DocType" property.Journal Article
Year: 2007
Region: Africa
Observation Type:
Observation Needs:
Document Status: Unsubmitted, 2009/09/30
Parameters: NO ambient monitoring. NEDDS PM2.5, black carbon


Description of Document: the lack of ambient monitoring data, and particularly urban roadside concentrations for particulate matter in SSA cities severely hinders our ability to describe temporal and spatial patterns of concentrations, characterize exposure–response relationships