Text notes describing Powerpoint Slides for:

"Toward a More Efficient Transboundary Exchange of Air Quality Data"

Slide 1. This (Powerpoint) presentation was prepared by Cliff Michaelsen, Maine DEP and Rich Poirot, VT DEC for an Air Quality Conference on "Clean Air in the Northeast" in St. John, New Brunswick, April 30 - May 1, 1996. See last page notes for e-mail, snail-mail and phone connections). Feel free to pass this .ppt file along to anyone who might be interested.

The original presentation included 3 imbedded Voyager Movie animations (scotia3.avi, pmozsu92.avi and usflw792.avi ) which (to minimize size requirements) are not included in this Powerpoint file. The movies may be obtained via the NEARDAT internet website at: http://capita.wustl.edu/neardat or by contacting Rich or Cliff (see notes on last page)

These movies may (or may not) play automatically on the Microsoft Media Player. They will play more reliably and controllably on the CAPITA Movie Program (movie4.exe), also available at http:///capita.wustl.edu, under Software Utilities.

Slide 2. Acknowledgments

Many Thanks to the Following Folks For Their Contributions to This Effort:

Paul Wishinski / State of Vermont DEC

Stefan Falke / CAPITA, Washington Univ.

Brett Schichtel / CAPITA, Washington Univ.

Rudy Husar / CAPITA, Washington Univ.

Jeff Brook / AES, Environment Canada

David Waugh / DOE, AESBED

Steve Beauchamp / DOE, AESBED

Ray Hoff / AES, Environment Canada

Slide 3. We examine 3 "transboundary" pollution events, with the following objectives:

  1. To illustrate that air pollution flows freely in both directions across the US / Canada border (but is not routinely observed, or documented)
  2. To emphasize the importance of exchanging and merging our collective air quality data (which typically stops at the border).

These episodes included:

  1. Arsenic transport from Canada to the Northeast states during 1989,
  2. Ozone transport from the Northeast states to the Eastern Provinces during July, 1994,
  3. Multiple-pollutant (O3, PM-10, PM-2.5, SO4, H+) transport from Midwestern US to Northeast States and Provinces during August, 1992.

Before we started this effort, we thought:

  1. We understood these Episodes (with our limited US data) pretty well,
  2. It would be relatively easy to gather and merge some transboundary air quality data.

Slide 4. This is a frame from a B. Schichtel movie of Flow visualization with the CAPITA Monte Carlo model which can be obtained at: http://capita.wustl.edu/OTAG/Data/JulyHiElev/usfl792.html

The Movie4.exe software to play the movie can be found at:

http://capita.wustl.edu/capita/utilities/Movie/Description.html

Description: The animation shows a dynamic flow simulation of airmasses over North America during 7/1/1992 - 7/14/1992. The left hand side of the movie contains the spatial location of all particles emitted at a constant rate from a spatially uniform grid at the surface layer of the atmosphere. The particles have been colored based upon their height. The blue particles are at the surface, the red particles are above 3 km, and the yellow and green particles are between these heights. The right hand side displays the vertical position of the particles for four longitudinal slices across the map view. The vertical slices are evenly spaced over the map view and are 150km wide.

Purpose: The flow visualization is created to illustrate the transport phenomena in the lower atmosphere, such as air stagnation, convergence of airmasses, fronts, ventilation, and general 3 dimensional motion.

Method: The transport simulation was created using the CAPITA Monte Carlo Model. Particles were released from 504 sources uniformly distributed over the Continental US. Three particles were released from each source every two hours, and were tracked for seven days. The calculation of the transport of the particles was done using the wind fields generated by the National Meteorological Center's Nested Grid Model with a grid resolution of 180 km.

Interpretation: This movie displays several of the characteristics of regional scale flow in the lower atmosphere. First, the daily "breathing" of the atmospheric due to the diurnal cycling of the mixing height is clearly seen. The nocturnal mixing layer is low, 100 - 300 m, and the particles released into this layer remain at the surface. During the day, the mixing height increases, and the particles are mixed throughout the layer diluting the high concentrations of particle that accumulated during the night.

Several instances are also apparent where two regional airmasses converge. In one instance extending from 7/2 to 7/4 an airmass heading southwest from Quebec, Canada and another heading northeast from the Midwest converge over New York state and Canada. At the convergence zone, the flow is stagnant and there is a high density of particles. The converging airmasses cause upward vertical motion as seen by the large number of particles transported to heights above 4 km. The simulation also illustrates the ventilating effects of high wind speeds. During 7/11 meandering winds in the Northwest and Canada cause a buildup of particles. Around 7/12, strong westerly winds transport these particles to the east leaving a low particle density.

Slide 5. Highest airborne concentrations and deposition rates of sulfur (and other pollutants) are typically observed downwind of areas of highest emissions. Note that these NAPAP emissions data are 11 years old, and may have changed significantly. This was, however, the most recent emissions data we could find (in a useful format) which included both US and Canadian emissions data.

Surely we (collectively) can do better than this!

Slide 6. Here, monthly mean wet sulfate deposition data from the NADP network are compared with fine particle sulfate data from the IMPROVE and NEPART networks for the month of July, 1990. Collective US and Canadian efforts to understand "acid rain" over the past decade have led to a reasonably firm scientific understanding of the patterns, origins and effects of sulfur pollution. Recently initiated, bilateral emissions control programs should result in significant reductions in sulfur emissions in the next 10 years.

Slide 7. While US (or North American) patterns of many air pollutants are similar to those for sulfur deposition or sulfate concentration, other pollutants exhibit very different spatial patterns. In this case we see monthly mean Arsenic concentrations from the combined IMPROVE and NEPART networks for December, 1989. Note that attempted measurements were conducted at all sites (small white circles), but values at many sites were below detection limits. Note also, that these networks include only rural/remote "background" sites, and that the spatial coverage of measurement sites is sparse in some regions. The highest concentrations of fine particle arsenic were observed in an area of the Southwest - particularly at Chiracahua National Park in New Mexico. High concentrations were also observed in the Northeast - particularly at Underhill Vermont, on the side of Mt. Mansfield.

These high Northeastern concentrations were of particular concern in Vermont - from a human health perspective, as arsenic is a suspected carcinogen - and also from a regulatory perspective, as the concentrations exceeded the State's ambient standards for arsenic at a remote background site. Vermont's hazardous air contaminant regulations required a determination that the impact from any new source, combined with background levels, would not exceed standards.

Slide 8. The temporal pattern of arsenic at the Vermont site was extremely "episodic". More than half the attempted measurements were below the detection limit for arsenic (about 0.2 nanograms/m3). But occasional "spikes" were recorded at nearly 50 times the MDL level. Relatively high concurrent levels of arsenic in VT and other northeastern sites suggested source influence at some distance from the region. The episodic exposure regime, suggests possible influence of an intermittent "plume hit" from a distant stationary source (or few sources).

Slide 9. We recently came across a small but very useful batch of Canadian data that (someone who deserves a medal) had submitted to the EPA AIRS database. From AIRS, it has become quite easy for us to extract any air quality data in the highly useful "Voyager" format - using the AIRS/Voyager Data Delivery System, developed at the Center for Air Pollution Impact and Trend Analysis (CAPITA), with funding support from EPA OAQPS, NESCAUM and EPA-New England.. Such data can then be explored, merged with other data sets, and analyzed with the (freeware) Voyager Data Visualization software, available via Internet at http:03/31/97/capita.wustl.edu under he "Software Utilities" page. SO2 data from a site in the northwest corner of Montreal was of particular interest here. While the timing of VT As and Montreal SO2 was typically offset by a day or 2, nearly every VT As "hit was accompanied by a SO2 "hit" in Montreal a day before or after.

So what kinds of large, distant, northern point sources emit SO2 and arsenic?

Slide 10. Backward air trajectory calculations using the NOAA HY-SPLIT trajectory model and NGM meteorological data suggest flows arriving at Underhill, VT at 3 PM on days with highest Arsenic concentrations had passed over an area where large Canadian smelters at Noranda and Sudbury are presumed to emit relatively high levels of Arsenic (and SO2).

For these events, it appeared more likely that Noranda, rather than Sudbury, was the most important source. Although conceivably there may be other unconsidered Arsenic sources along this path. Also, the estimated uncertainty of the trajectory model (20 to 30 % of trajectory distance) may not allow a clear distinction between the large smelters at this distance and direction.

Slide 11. During a similar time period, Ray Hoff from environment Canada, AES had also noted high Arsenic concentrations at several southern Ontario sites. Ray used the ratio of Arsenic (emitted by both Coal combustion and Smelters) to Selenium (emitted in much higher quantities by Coal burning) to focus on the Smelter influences. His back trajectories (calculated by the AES Trajectory model) tend to implicate Sudbury rather than Noranda for these high arsenic events. Hum?

Slide 12. We took another look at our HY-SPLIT trajectories, in this case calculating them for arrival times at 3 AM (instead of 3 PM) at Underhill, VT on days when 24 hour levels of Arsenic (and As/Se ratios) were high. At this point, were pretty confused about whether Noranda or Sudbury (or both) was (were) the influential source(s).

If only we had some emissions data....

Slide 13. In any event, there appears to be a happy ending to the Vermont Arsenic story. Concentrations dropped substantially after the end of 1989, and have now fallen below the level of Vermont's State toxic standard. Our understanding (not well confirmed) is that there were major revisions to control equipment at both Noranda and Sudbury at about this time period (for SO2/ Acid Rain control purposes).

It would appear that there were also serendipitous benefits in terms of Arsenic emissions reductions. In any event, the Northeast States are certainly grateful (although now we aren't sure who to thank).

Too often, in both countries, we tend to focus on a single air pollutant at a time - in our air quality measurements, emissions inventories and control strategies. How many other potential multi-pollutant effects and opportunities for "serendipitous" management strategies go unrecognized because we neglect to routinely exchange and compare data across our common border?

Slide 14. One area of transboundary data exchange where we have seen some recent progress is in the form of meteorological calculations routinely calculated by the Canadian AES and shared with the Northeast States.

Back Trajectories supplied to the State of Maine by AES Bedford via the internet have been extremely helpful in assisting the Bureau of Air Quality in generating the smog forecasts 48 hour in advance. 36 hour back trajectories are generated at the standard 12Z and 0Z time intervals.... and are calculated for multiple locations throughout the Provinces and the Ozone Transport Region.

Three levels are calculated from specific locations at: 1000mb, 925mb, and 850mb's. The Canadian Met Model that drives these calculations, the RFM model, has been very accurate in identifying "looping " that occurs off the coast of Maine and transports the 'Boston Plume' inland.

Slide 15. Routine ozone measurements alone can often provide strong empirical evidence of transport - for example along the coast of Maine during the July 20-22, 1994 episode. Concentrations in excess of the 80 ppb Maine State Standard were recorded at all of these coastal sites, four of which also recorded exceedances of the federal standard. With persistent southwesterly winds throughout the day, the hour of maximum concentration occurs progressively later in the day as one moves to the northeast, ranging from 12 noon at Lynn, MA to as late as 9pm at Jonesport, ME.

It seems that there are times during the ozone season where one could actually set their watch to the hourly progression of these transported plumes migrating down the coast of Maine. The NE-ward movement is not the only force at hand; coastal sea breezes that seem to elude many of the advanced meteorological models play a very important role in re-introducing off-shore plumes into coastal locations in Maine. Many of Maine's most significant episodes are driven by these E/SE to W/NW flow patterns that become active in the afternoon when the onshore winds become active.

Note: Several of the following images are reproduced from, and are discussed in additional detail in a NESCAUM report entitled "Preview of 1994 Ozone Precursors in the Northeastern US", available at:

http://capita.wustl.edu/nescaum/Reports/PAMS94/nepams_c.htm

Slide 16. The ozone levels from these North Atlantic Coastal sites can also displayed as 8-hour running averages and provide a clear impression of ozone transport along the coast. In addition to the smooth, northeasterly time progression and broadening of the plume over time, the 8-hour averages also show the chronic nature of the transported ozone exposures. An 8-hour standard of 0.09 ppm would have been exceeded at 5 of these sites; 0.08 ppm would have been exceeded at 7 sites; and 0.07 ppm exceeded at all of these coastal sites.

Slide 17. When monitored ozone data from New Brunswick and Nova Scotia are added to this 8 hour moving average, distinct differences are observed. Observed peaks are considerably smaller in scale at those Canadian Maritime sites the farther one enters the Bay of Fundy. As has been suggested by comparisons of acid fog monitoring in the Gulf of Maine with ozone monitoring in the US and in the Maritimes, ozone is likely to be precipitated out by the large amount of AM fog that is representative along the coast of Maine, but of more suspect is the division and degradation of of the off-shore plumes as they are transported into the spillway of the St. Lawrence. (Note the Forest Hills and Fundy Park moving average cycles).

Notice how large sources of NOx produced by utility stationary sources just to the SW of Pt. Lapreau scavenge ozone during the time when other stations are monitoring their highest readings. Utility demands, wind direction and NOx output are consistent with this assumption. At the farthest downwind site, North Cape PEI, long range transport from the entire Eastern Seaboard allows O3 readings to peak very late at night.

The diurnal pattern of Halifax more closely resembles its counterparts in Maine.

Slide 18. At the moment, there is no easy way for Canadian and US scientists to examine combined US/Canadian air quality data. US analysis stops at the US border and vice versa. Information collected by both governments fall into their respective repositories, and to date, only an exhaustive procedure involving numerous manipulations of several data sets with multiple software applications is available to view the collective monitored data.

There are many significant reasons to establish a mechanism that allows the sharing of this wealth of isolated information. Here are three:

  1. Advanced public health smog advisories.
  2. Validation of photochemical modeling.
  3. Data assessment

Each government is in the process of updating their main data archive center. It is hoped that a more user-friendly system can be created to utilize the monitored data that is collected, or only half of the story will be told.

Slide 19. This is the first three panel Voyager movie generated from actual data that represents the transport of tropospheric pollution within New England and into the Eastern Provinces. Of equal importance, ozone data collected from the Scotia Prince Ferry (that traverses the Gulf of Maine from Portland, Maine to Yarmouth, N.S. twice daily) can be seen as hourly values during the ships passage.

Vector wind speeds and directions are are run in concert with color segregated ground level ozone readings (from Long Island Sound to Prince Edward Island) and at the bottom, a profile of the five day air quality episode.

As the movie is run in animation or single step mode, concentrations are seen to maximize on the 21st of July, 1994. Values indicated by the Scotia Prince three hours off-shore the coast of Maine exceed the NAAQS standard of .124 ppm as the boat literally runs into a plume (which then migrates toward the coast, mixes with fresh continental emissions/ozone, and cumulatively impacts inland air quality).

Slide 20. Originally, we thought that by analyzing the 36 hour back trajectory (created with NOAA's HY-SPLIT model), we would be able to ascertain the source origin of this July 21st episode. Both coastal locations in Maine were highly impacted by transport up the eastern seaboard, while North Cape PEI, with it's signature of long range night-time transport, derives its origins from a more predominantly westerly flow.

Apparently this only half of the story

Slide 21. By creating the 3 PM back trajectory for July 20th, 1994, there is the strong indication that the magnitude of the episode on the 21st may have been amplified by synoptic-scale "background" contributions from more westerly transport on the preceding day.

Slide 22. This frame from the movie PMOZSU92.AVI shows (US-only) patterns of 3 PM ozone (left) and daily PM-10 (right) and PM-10 Sulfate (red bars) on August 28, 1992. This was a relatively severe multi-pollutant episode in the Northeastern US.

Note: PM-10 Sulfate concentrations are not routinely measured at all sites. During this time period they are limited primarily to the States of Illinois, New York, Vermont New Hampshire and Maine.

Slide 23. The intervening time period - August 22 to 28, 1992 represents a slowly moving episode of multi-pollutant transport from the Midwestern US into the Northeast States and Eastern Canadian Provinces.

Slide 24. The temporal pattern of maximum 24-hour moving average ozone across the northern US shows a peak at Toledo Ohio on the evening of August 22. Erie, PA peaks on the following day. Underhill, VT peaks 2 days later on August 25. While the most northeasterly site - Jonesport, ME peaks on August 27.

Slide 25. A similar West to East progression can be observed in fine particle (< 2.5 microns) mass and sulfate measurements provided by Jeff Brook of Environment Canada, AES.

Note that the highest fine particle mass concentrations are in excess of 50 micrograms per cubic meter - a level recently proposed by the US EPA as a new 24-hour National Ambient Air Quality Standard for Fine Particle Mass Concentration. Note also that half or more of the fine mass concentrations are typically composed of sulfate during peak days of this episode. At this point, we appear to have a relatively clear-cut example of a classic ozone and sulfate transport event from the Midwestern US.

Note however, that fine mass and sulfate levels peak at the most easterly Kejimkujik, Nova Scotia site on August 25 and 26. Keji fine mass concentrations drop considerably on August 27 - the day when ozone peaked at the (not-so-far-away) Jonesport Maine site.

Slide 26. Jeff Brook's measurements also include concentrations of strong acidity associated with the fine particle concentrations. Note that very high acidity levels were observed at the remote Keji site on August 25 and 26, even though sulfate levels were only moderately high (about 15 micrograms per cubic meter) at Keji on these dates.

The relatively high ratio of acidity to sulfate suggests a relatively low degree of neutralization (by ammonium) of the sulfuric acid aerosol. Since ammonia emissions are relatively ubiquitous over land, a poorly neutralized sulfate aerosol is not consistent with the concept of very long-range transport of acidity (for example from the Midwestern US to Maritime Canada).

Slide 27. The backward HY-SPLIT trajectories displayed here are calculated (provided by Paul Wishinski, VT DEC) for 3 PM arrival times at several of Jeff Brooks sites on the days when peak fine mass and sulfate concentrations were recorded at each site. For Windsor, Toronto and Montreal, their highest concentrations are associated with (markedly similar) flows which had previously circulated over an area of the eastern US including both the Central Atlantic Coast and Ohio River Valley.

The Kejimkujic trajectory on 8/26/92 is more easterly and has not passed over the high sulfur-emitting areas of the Midwestern US. For more than a day prior to arrival at Keji, the trajectory traveled over water (where sources of sulfur and ammonia are minimal. Perhaps these factors can help account for the unique combination of relatively lower sulfate, but higher acidity at Keji compared to the other sites.

Slide 28. By August 27 - when fine mass and acidity levels have dropped substantially at Jeff Brook's monitoring sites - the trajectory flows to these Canadian sites indicate strong ventilation from the North.

Yet just to the South, Ozone, PM-10 and Sulfate are approaching their maximum levels in Northern New England.

Slide 29. Limited US fine particle mass and sulfate data are available from several Northeastern US sites (from the NESCAUM NEPART network) on August 26 and 28. While concentrations are much higher than average at these sites on August 26, there are much higher yet on August 28. A peak fine mass concentration of greater than 80 micrograms per cubic meter (half of which was sulfate) was observed at the remote Quabbin, Massachusetts on the 28th!

Slide 30. Back trajectories for several of the NEPART sites on 8/28/92 were provided by Bret Schichtel of CAPITA using the CAPITA Monte Carlo model. The NEPART network did not measure aerosol acidity directly; however an indirect estimate of acidity (shown as black bars) is occasionally possible through comparison of elemental sulfur and hydrogen measurements from the NEPART filters. The estimated acidity levels at several NEPART sites on 8/28/92 were the highest ever observed in the 1989-93 period of NEPART operation.

Unlike the southern Canadian sites, New England was still experiencing flows fro the Midwestern US at this time. Note however that the (blue) trajectories - arriving at the Quabbin, MA site (with maximum fine mass sulfate and acidity) have passed over Midwestern source areas, but have also stagnated more recently over over Northeast coast metropolitan areas. Here, as with the Kejimkujic site a few days earlier, we appear to have a combined influence from distant and relatively nearby sources.

Effective management of transboundary air resources requires a better understanding of the complex influences of local, regional and more distant sources. This understanding and subsequent development of management strategies will continue to be compromised so long as our data (unlike our pollution) does not flow freely across our common border.

Slide 31. We Examined 3 Episodes of Transboundary Pollution Transport

We Assumed We Understood These Episodes in Advance.

Assumed it would be Easy To Merge US & Canadian Data.

Both Assumptions Were Wrong!

We Efficiently Exchange Air Pollution Across our Border, Where it is Merged with Local Source Influences, but is Too Often Unobserved, Undocumented, and Uncontrolled.

We Need More Efficient Mechanisms to Exchange and Merge our Collective Air Quality Data!

For additional information, please feel free to contact:
Rich Poirot (richp@qtm.anr.state.vt.us)

Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation

Air Pollution Control Division

Building 3 South

103 South Main Street

Waterbury, VT 05671-0402

phone: (802) 241-3840

or

Cliff Michaelsen (Clifton.W.Michaelse@STATE.ME.US)

Maine Department of Environmental Protection

Bureau of Air Quality

State House Station #17

Augusta, ME 04333

phone: (207) 287-2437