Subject: SCIENTISTS DEVELOP OTAG CHAT ROOM


   URL:  http://wupa.wustl.edu/nai/feature/1997/May97-CleanAirChat.html
 CHATTING ABOUT CLEAN AIR RESEARCH
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 Ozone 'Chat Room' Provides
 Real-time Air-Quality Research

 by Tony Fitzpatrick

 Contact:
 Washington University
 in St. Louis
 Tony Fitzpatrick
 314-935-5272

 Environmental scientists at Washington University in St. Louis have developed
 a revolutionary Internet air pollution "chat room" that is helping to shape
 policy and provide a better understanding of how ozone, a nasty, unhealthy air
 pollutant, moves across the country.

 Since spring 1996, Rudolf B. Husar, Ph.D., professor of mechanical engineering
 and director of Washington University's Center for Air Pollution Impact,
 Trends and Analysis (CAPITA), and Bret A. Schichtel, Ph.D., CAPITA research
 associate, have been key players in the air quality workgroup of the U.S.
 Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Ozone Transport Assessment Group
 (OTAG).

 Instead of meeting in St. Louis or Washington, D.C., however, the air quality
 workgroup has a perpetual "virtual gathering" across the Internet. Through
 this real-time, interactive site, air-quality colleagues, comprising national
 air pollution experts, state air quality directors, industry representatives,
 environmental groups and EPA personnel, among others, have been able to make
 inferences about the regional nature of ozone and its long-range transport.

 These findings better clarify the understanding of ozone and will affect
 regulations on industry and ultimately citizens. People in communities with
 unacceptable levels of ozone not only may suffer health effects from ozone
 pollution, but also may face government-imposed lifestyle changes, such as
 mandated car-pooling and other travel restrictions, limited or no outdoors
 barbecuing, and restricted hours to mow lawns and do other outdoor activities.

 Summer Sizzle

 The good old summer time is "Ozone Season." Ground-level ozone is a harmful
 pollutant that can cause health problems, especially for children, the elderly
 and people with respiratory conditions. A major contributor to smog, ozone is
 an irritating gas formed when hydrocarbons mix with nitrogen oxide in
 sunlight. Industrial and consumer activities, most involving combustion, are
 behind the formation of ground-level ozone, and sunlight and high temperatures
 play key roles in driving atmospheric levels to the damaging point.

 Current EPA ozone attainment standards state that an area cannot exceed .12
 parts per million of ozone averaged over an hour more than three times during
 the past three years. Ozone is measured hourly in 37 states that are
 considered to have an ozone problem. Anything above these measurements is
 considered non-attainment. Environmental amendments to the Clean Air Act of
 1990 established five different categories of ozone non-attainment: (1)
 marginal; (2) moderate; (3) serious; (4) severe; and (5) extreme. Los Angeles
 is a category 5; St. Louis, which had been designated a 2, is expected to be
 upgraded to a 3. Many other communities face upgrades similar to St. Louis as
 EPA ponders tougher standards for both ozone and particulate matter later this
 summer.

 "There is a two-fold revolution at work in the OTAG operation," says Husar, a
 veteran EPA consultant on acid rain and haze research. "For one, it has
 changed EPA's emphasis from command-control to consensus-building. Throughout
 its existence, EPA came up with regulations and enforced them with little
 input from others, least of which those who face the biggest sanctions. By
 building consensus beforehand, the stakeholders generally will agree to the
 basic principles of management decisions before they are implemented.

 "Second, the interactive Internet approach has altered the way environmental
 research itself is done. Much wasted time and energy are eliminated by cutting
 down on travel and meetings, and fresh research is posted frequently. This
 way, people are able to observe and comment on the work as it is being
 presented, and everyone benefits."

 The interaction of the air quality workgroup is made possible by CAPITA, the
 world's largest private library of air pollution literature and computerized
 data, begun at Washington University more than 20 years ago. Many hundreds of
 gigabytes are stored at and transferred through CAPITA, which has data that
 span more than 100 years of American pollution and energy consumption. The air
 quality workgroup focuses on data spanning 10 years, from 1986-1995. Group
 members can access hourly ozone measurements from air-quality sites in every
 county of the 37 states most heavily affected by ozone pollution. They also
 can access daily meteorological data, primarily consisting of wind speed and
 direction.

 In addition to technical reports, color animations developed at CAPITA showing
 ozone movement across a map of the United States also can be accessed at this
 website. Scores of people visit the website daily, and there is nearly daily
 discussion on the information and ideas presented. Moreover, the data can be
 downloaded from CAPITA and used for other research, and specialized databases
 can be generated.

 The website address is: http://capita.wustl.edu/otag/ture/1997/May97-CleanAirChat.html .

 Finding the Culprit

 "We provide the technical support for analysis of vast amounts of data
 pertaining to ozone so that we can enlighten the decision-makers," says Husar.
 "Historically, ozone has been considered a local problem maintained by
 cleaning up local emissions. But more recently, it's been recognized that
 attainment in some eastern U.S. areas cannot be achieved by simple cutbacks at
 the local level because a reasonably large fraction of the ozone occurring in
 such areas is actually transported in from the outside. So, whatever ozone is
 added on top is the ozone that is bumping the region into non-attainment."

 One such area where this is occurring, Husar says, is the D.C.-New York
 corridor.
 "The argument is that they cannot achieve attainment simply because most of
 the ozone is not theirs," he explains.

 But where is it coming from? Answering that question is a major quest of the
 OTAG air quality workgroup, and through this new approach to environmental
 research, Husar and Schichtel have been able to reach some tentative
 conclusions that implicate their own region, the Midwest. Also, they are
 seeing new trends in the South.

 "There is something special about the Midwest," says Husar. "There is always a
 pool of ozone in the greater Ohio River Valley -- roughly from Illinois to
 western Pennsylvania -- and when the wind blows from the Midwest toward the
 east, neighboring areas receive higher doses. The data are very clear on
 that."

 Another observation: Compared with weekdays, ozone levels are reduced over
 weekends.

 "Only humans operate on a weekly cycle, so this graphically ties human
 activity during the work week to ozone production," says Schichtel, who has
 concentrated greatly on meteorological data to develop ozone transport
 animations. The animations, available through the OTAG Washington University
 website, show pulses of ozone moving eastward with air flow across the
 Midwest.

 In the South, high ozone is associated with slow wind speeds, an indication of
 higher local contributions of ozone. However, Schichtel says recent analyses
 once again cast suspicion on the Heartland.
 "We're seeing some transport from the Midwest, which implicates the Midwest
 but doesn't prove that it is the source of higher levels," says Schichtel, who
 bases the observation on measuring wind and ozone data using a trajectory
 analysis.

 There are two other OTAG subgroups, one dealing with policy, the other with
 computer modeling. Both use information and data gathered by the air quality
 workgroup.

 "The beauty of the OTAG operation is that we can establish a virtual community
 of interacting people without having to be at a specific place," Husar says.
 "This is a dream come true for an environmental engineer -- to express your
 viewpoints and research and participate in something that has substantial
 meaning for the American public, all the while using our skills and resources
 from more than 20 years of work at CAPITA."

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