In the wake of the 2020 COVID-19 lockdowns, researchers in northern Italy noticed that notwithstanding the partial suspension of travel and industrial production in the region, the level of particulate matter in the atmosphere remained high.
This is significant as air pollution, especially particulate matter, is one of the planet's main environmental health concerns and policies that address particulate matter tend to focus on transport and industry, even though there is growing evidence that agriculture plays a significant role.
As part of the INHALE project, in collaboration with the Italian non-profit organization Legambiente Lombardia and Bocconi University, CMCC researchers have conducted a series of studies that seek to assess the extent of human health impacts from agriculture activities in the Po Valley so as to assess the dominant pollution regimes and possible air quality improvements from hypothetical emissions reductions.
In a study, titled "The formation of secondary inorganic aerosols: A data-driven investigation of Lombardy's secondary inorganic aerosol problem" in Atmospheric Environment, CMCC researchers drew on the predictive power of machine learning models and exploited the reduction in non-agricultural emissions during the lockdown to investigate the complex relationship between ammonia, nitrogen dioxide, and secondary inorganic aerosol concentrations.