Enhancing Anthropogenic Nmvoc Emission Representation for European Air Quality Modelling

64 Pages Posted: 28 Mar 2025

See all articles by Kevin Oliveira

Kevin Oliveira

Barcelona Supercomputing Center

Marc Guevara

Barcelona Supercomputing Center

Jeroen Kuenen

TNO Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research

Oriol Jorba

Barcelona Supercomputing Center

Carlos Pérez García-Pando

Barcelona Supercomputing Center

Hugo Denier Van Der Gon

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Abstract

Non-Methane Volatile Organic Compounds (NMVOCs) impact health and air quality, contributing to ozone and secondary organic aerosols (SOA). With stricter pollutant limits and a growing emphasis on modelling under the new European Ambient Air Quality Directive, improving NMVOC representation—particularly in terms of speciation—is essential. Current state-of-the-art European inventories rely on outdated data, potentially limiting accuracy. This study assesses for the first time the CAMS-REGv7.1 NMVOC emission inventory across Europe and evaluates the impact of replacing its default speciation with a more recent alternative using the MONARCH chemical transport model, comparing the results with benzene, toluene and xylene observations for 2019. The impact of changing the speciation on modelled O3 is also quantified.The updated speciation profile shows significant changes in emissions across NMVOCs species, with all species showing changes greater than ±15 %. These changes significantly affect their spatial distribution and sector contributions. Air quality modelling results shows notable improvements for benzene (average NMB from -46.1 % to -27.7 %), primarily driven by a better split of residential wood combustion NMVOC proposed in this work. For toluene and xylenes, major overestimations previously observed in capital cities are largely reduced by improving the characterization of solvent activities with the new speciation profiles. However, some areas showed degraded performance likely due to the over-allocation of industrial emissions in urban areas, limiting the assessment of speciation changes. Despite significant changes in the split of NMVOCs, the proposed changes show minimal impact on modelled O3 levels, aside from localised spatial and temporal variability. The largest daily variations in MDA8 were -14 µg/m³ in March and +8 µg/m³ in May. The effects are smaller during the summer, possibly due to an increasing role from biogenic emissions. Additional measurements of NMVOC species, along with more detailed model mechanisms, are needed to extend the evaluation.

Keywords: Volatile Organic Compounds, Anthropogenic Emissions, Air
Pollution, Model Evaluation, Ozone sensitivity

Suggested Citation

Oliveira, Kevin and Guevara, Marc and Kuenen, Jeroen and Jorba, Oriol and Pérez García-Pando, Carlos and Gon, Hugo Denier Van Der, Enhancing Anthropogenic Nmvoc Emission Representation for European Air Quality Modelling. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=5197276 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.5197276

Kevin Oliveira (Contact Author)

Barcelona Supercomputing Center ( email )

C/Jordi Girona 29
Barcelona, 08034
Spain

Marc Guevara

Barcelona Supercomputing Center ( email )

C/Jordi Girona 29
Barcelona, 08034
Spain

Jeroen Kuenen

TNO Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research ( email )

Hoofddorp
Netherlands

Oriol Jorba

Barcelona Supercomputing Center ( email )

C/Jordi Girona 29
Barcelona, 08034
Spain

Carlos Pérez García-Pando

Barcelona Supercomputing Center ( email )

Hugo Denier Van Der Gon

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

No Address Available

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