Health Effects Caused by Primary Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5) Emitted from Buses in the Helsinki Metropolitan Area, Finland
- 1 February 2005
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Risk Analysis
- Vol. 25 (1) , 151-160
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0272-4332.2005.00574.x
Abstract
Fine particle (PM(2.5)) emissions from traffic have been associated with premature mortality. The current work compares PM(2.5)-induced mortality in alternative public bus transportation strategies as being considered by the Helsinki Metropolitan Area Council, Finland. The current bus fleet and transportation volume is compared to four alternative hypothetical bus fleet strategies for the year 2020: (1) the current bus fleet for 2020 traffic volume, (2) modern diesel buses without particle traps, (3) diesel buses with particle traps, and (4) buses using natural gas engines. The average population PM(2.5) exposure level attributable to the bus emissions was determined for the 1996-1997 situation using PM(2.5) exposure measurements including elemental composition from the EXPOLIS-Helsinki study and similar element-based source apportionment of ambient PM(2.5) concentrations observed in the ULTRA study. Average population exposure to particles originating from the bus traffic in the year 2020 is assumed to be proportional to the bus emissions in each strategy. Associated mortality was calculated using dose-response relationships from two large cohort studies on PM(2.5) mortality from the United States. Estimated number of deaths per year (90% confidence intervals in parenthesis) associated with primary PM(2.5) emissions from buses in Helsinki Metropolitan Area in 2020 were 18 (0-55), 9 (0-27), 4 (0-14), and 3 (0-8) for the strategies 1-4, respectively. The relative differences in the associated mortalities for the alternative strategies are substantial, but the number of deaths in the lowest alternative, the gas buses, is only marginally lower than what would be achieved by diesel engines equipped with particle trap technology. The dose-response relationship and the emission factors were identified as the main sources of uncertainty in the model.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prospective Study of Air Pollution and Bronchitic Symptoms in Children with AsthmaAmerican Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2003
- Source apportionment of urban ambient PM2.5 in two successive measurement campaigns in Helsinki, FinlandAtmospheric Environment, 2003
- Atmospheric Secondary Inorganic Particulate Matter: The Toxicological Perspective as a Basis for Health Effects Risk AssessmentInhalation Toxicology, 2003
- Modelling long-range transport of primary particulate material over EuropeAtmospheric Environment, 2000
- Association of fine particulate matter from different sources with daily mortality in six U.S. cities.Environmental Health Perspectives, 2000
- Associations between air pollution and mortality in Phoenix, 1995-1997.Environmental Health Perspectives, 2000
- Acute Exposure to Diesel Exhaust Increases IL-8 and GRO- α Production in Healthy Human AirwaysAmerican Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2000
- Acute Inflammatory Responses in the Airways and Peripheral Blood After Short-Term Exposure to Diesel Exhaust in Healthy Human VolunteersAmerican Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 1999
- Risk assessment of the common air pollutants in Teplice, Czech RepublicToxicology Letters, 1998
- An Association between Air Pollution and Mortality in Six U.S. CitiesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993