Syllabus Edition
First teaching 2024
First exams 2026
Causes of Urban Air Pollution (DP IB Environmental Systems & Societies (ESS))
Revision Note
Written by: Alistair Marjot
Reviewed by: Bridgette Barrett
Causes of Urban Air Pollution
What is urban air pollution?
Human activities that release harmful substances into the atmosphere cause urban air pollution
Pollutants in the air can come from many sources and impact both human health and the environment
Common pollutants include:
Nitrogen oxides (NOx)
Sulphur dioxide (SO2)
Carbon monoxide (CO)
Particulate matter (PM)
Particulate matter refers to tiny solid particles or liquid droplets in the air
These particles can come from dust, soot, smoke, and vehicle emissions
Particulate matter can be classified by size:
PM2.5: fine particles with a diameter of 2.5 micrometres or smaller
PM10: larger particles with a diameter of 10 micrometres or smaller
Primary pollutants
Primary pollutants are harmful substances that are:
Directly emitted from a source
Immediately active in the atmosphere
They enter the air through various activities like burning fossil fuels, industrial processes, or natural events such as volcanic eruptions
Sources of primary pollutants
Natural sources:
Some air pollutants come from natural events that occur without human involvement
Forest fires: release smoke, ash, and particulate matter into the air
Dust storms: strong winds lift dust from dry areas, which spreads to cities
Volcanic eruptions: these produce large amounts of SO2 and ash
Anthropogenic (human-made) sources:
Many pollutants in urban areas come from human activities, especially those involving the burning of fuels
Burning fossil fuels: emissions from vehicles, power plants, and factories produce NOx, SO2, CO, and PM
Agricultural burning and deforestation: these release large quantities of smoke, dust, and other pollutants into the atmosphere
Construction sites and roads: create dust and PM from the movement of machinery and vehicles
Industrial processes: factories release pollutants like NOx and PM from smokestacks and chemical processing
Common pollutants from urban activities
The most common pollutants in urban areas are usually linked to the combustion of fossil fuels
Particulate matter (PM2.5 and PM10): tiny particles from exhaust fumes, industrial activities, and construction dust
CO: released by cars and industrial processes that burn fuels
NOx: produced by vehicle emissions and power plants
SO2: released mainly by burning coal and oil
Secondary pollutants
Secondary pollutants are not emitted directly but form in the atmosphere when primary pollutants react with other chemicals
Tropospheric ozone (O3): forms when nitrogen oxides (NOx) react with sunlight
It is a major component of urban smog
Examples of urban air pollution
Beijing, China: often experiences high levels of PM2.5, mainly due to coal burning for energy and industrial activity
Los Angeles, USA: struggles with ozone pollution due to a high number of vehicles and sunny weather, which speeds up the reaction that forms ozone
The burning of crops, industrial activity, and vehicle emissions frequently cause severe air pollution in New Delhi, India
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