References
- 71 World Health Assembly, “Health, environment and climate change:report by the Director-General,” World Heal. Organ., vol. 2016, no. SEVENTY-FIRSTWORLD HEALTH ASSEMBLY, pp. 1–7, 2018.
- I. Manisalidis, E. Stavropoulou, A. Stavropoulos, and E. Bezirtzoglou,“Environmental and Health Impacts of Air Pollution: A Review,” Front. Public Heal.,vol. 8, no. February, pp. 1–13, 2020.
- P. D. United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, “TheWorld ’s Cities in 2018,” World’s Cities 2018 - Data Bookl. (ST/ESA/SER.A/417), p.34, 2018.
- S. Gani et al., “Systematizing the approach to air quality measurement andanalysis in low and middle income countries,” Environ. Res. Lett., vol. 17, no. 2,Feb. 2022.
- V. F. McNeill, “Addressing the Global Air Pollution Crisis: Chemistry’sRole,” Trends Chem., vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 5–8, 2019.
- K. Karroum et al., “A Review of Air Quality Modeling,” Mapan - J. Metrol.Soc. India, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 287–300, 2020.
- S. López-Aparicio, M. Guevara, P. Thunis, K. Cuvelier, and L. Tarrasón,“Assessment of discrepancies between bottom-up and regional emissioninventories in Norwegian urban areas,” Atmos. Environ., vol. 154, pp. 285–296,2017.
- M. Li et al., “Special Topic: Air Pollution and Control Anthropogenicemission inventories in China: a review,” Natl. Sci. Rev., vol. 4, pp. 834–866, 2017.
- B. Xu et al., “The Study of Emission Inventory on Anthropogenic AirPollutants and Source Apportionment of PM 2.5 in the Changzhutan UrbanAgglomeration, China.”
- H. Q. Bang and V. H. N. Khue, Air Pollution: Monitoring, Quantification andRemoval of Gases and Particles. IntechOpen, 2019.
- D. A. Vallero, Fundamentals of Air Pollution, Fifth. 2014.
- M. Satt, M. De Almeida, D. Agosto, F. Gonçalves, H. Beatriz, and B. Cybis,“The evolution of city-scale GHG emissions inventory methods : A systematicreview,” Environ. Impact Assess. Rev., vol. 80, no. September 2019, p. 106316,2020.
- M. Trombetti et al., “Spatial inter-comparison of Top-down emissioninventories in European urban areas,” Atmos. Environ., vol. 173, no. May 2017, pp.142–156, 2018.
- European Environment Agency, EMEP/EEA air pollutant emission inventoryguidebook 2019, 13/2019. Luxembourg: European Environment Agency, 2019.
- et. al. Ole-Kenneth Nielsen, “EMEP/EEA air pollutant emission inventoryguidebook 2019 Small combustion,” 2019.
- T. Kuokkanen, “The convention on long-range transboundary air pollution,”Mak. Treaties Work Hum. Rights, Environ. Arms Control, pp. 161–178, 2007.
- Eutat, “Definition SNAP Nomenclature,” Eustat official statisticalinformation of the Basque Country, 2022. [Online]. Available:https://en.eustat.eus/documentos/elem_13173/definicion.html. [Accessed: 06-Jul-2022].
- L. Khazini, M. J. Kalajahi, Y. Rashidi, and S. M. M. M. Ghomi, “Real-worldand bottom-up methodology for emission inventory development and scenariodesign in medium-sized cities,” J. Environ. Sci., no. xxxx, 2022.
- L. Sartini, M. Antonelli, E. Pisoni, and P. Thunis, “From emissions to sourceallocation: Synergies and trade-offs between top-down and bottom-upinformation,” Atmos. Environ. X, vol. 7, no. July, p. 100088, 2020.
- E. Terrenoire et al., “High-resolution air quality simulation over Europe withthe chemistry transport model CHIMERE,” Geosci. Model Dev., vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 21–42, 2015.
- K. M. Fameli and V. D. Assimakopoulos, “The new open Flexible EmissionInventory for Greece and the Greater Athens Area (FEI-GREGAA): Account ofpollutant sources and their importance from 2006 to 2012,” Atmos. Environ., vol.137, pp. 17–37, 2016.
- L. Pallavidino, R. Prandi, A. Bertello, E. Bracco, and F. Pavone,“Compilation of a road transport emission inventory for the Province of Turin:Advantages and key factors of a bottom–up approach,” Atmos. Pollut. Res., vol. 5,no. 4, pp. 648–655, 2014.
- H. A. C. Denier Van Der Gon et al., “Particulate emissions from residentialwood combustion in Europe - revised estimates and an evaluation,” Atmos.Chem. Phys., vol. 15, no. 11, pp. 6503–6519, 2015.
- J. J. P. Kuenen, A. J. H. Visschedijk, M. Jozwicka, and H. A. C. Denier VanDer Gon, “TNO-MACC-II emission inventory; A multi-year (2003-2009) consistenthigh-resolution European emission inventory for air quality modelling,” Atmos.Chem. Phys., vol. 14, no. 20, pp. 10963–10976, 2014.
- P. Thunis et al., “Sensitivity of air quality modelling to different emissioninventories: A case study over Europe,” Atmos. Environ. X, vol. 10, no. October2020, p. 100111, 2021.
- M. Guevara, S. Lopez-Aparicio, C. Cuvelier, L. Tarrason, A. Clappier, andP. Thunis, “A benchmarking tool to screen and compare bottom-up and top-downatmospheric emission inventories,” Air Qual. Atmos. Heal., vol. 10, no. 5, pp.627–642, 2017.
- A. Elessa Etuman, I. Coll, and V. Rivera Salas, “OLYMPUS: An emissionmodel to connect urban form, individual practices and atmospheric pollutantrelease,” Atmos. Environ., vol. 245, no. 118013, 2021.
- “Volatile chemical products emerging as largest petrochemical source ofurban organic emissions,” Atmos. Chem., vol. 764, no. February, pp. 760–764,2018.
- S. Zhu, M. Mac Kinnon, B. P. Shaffer, and G. S. Samuelsen, “Anuncertainty for clean air: Air quality modeling implications of underestimatingVOC emissions in urban inventories,” Atmos. Environ., vol. 211 pp. 256–267,2019.
- Z. Zhou et al., “Compilation of emission inventory and source profiledatabase for volatile organic compounds : A case study for Sichuan, China,”Atmos. Pollut. Res., vol. 11, no. September, pp. 105–116, 2019.
- C. Gao, C. Gao, K. Song, Y. Xing, and W. Chen, “Vehicle emissionsinventory in high spatial – temporal resolution and emission reduction strategy inHarbin-Changchun Megalopolis,” Process Saf. Environ. Prot., vol. 138, pp. 236–245, 2020.
- I. Bouarar et al., “Influence of anthropogenic emission inventories onsimulations of air quality in China during winter and summer 2010,” Atmos.Environ., vol. 198, no. September 2018, pp. 236–256, 2019.
- H. Hua, S. Jiang, H. Sheng, Y. Zhang, X. Liu, and L. Zhang, “A high spatial-temporal resolution emission inventory of multi-type air pollutants for Wuxi city,”J. Clean. Prod., vol. 229, pp. 278–288, 2019.
- P. Jiang, X. Chen, Q. Li, H. Mo, and L. Li, “High-resolution emissioninventory of gaseous and particulate pollutants in Shandong Province, easternChina,” J. Clean. Prod., vol. 259, p. 120806, 2020.
- A. K. Pathak, M. Sharma, and P. K. Nagar, “Chemosphere A framework forPM 2 . 5 constituents-based ( including PAHs ) emission inventory and sourcetoxicity for priority controls : A case study of,” Chemosphere, vol. 255, p. 126971,2020.
- M. Zhu, L. Liu, S. Yin, J. Zhang, K. Wang, and R. Zhang, “County-levelemission inventory for rural residential combustion and emission reductionpotential by technology optimization : A case study of Henan, China,” Atmos.Environ., vol. 228, p. 117436, 2020.
- Y. Kwon, H. Lim, Y. Lim, and H. Lee, “Implication of activity-based vesselemission to improve regional air inventory in a port area,” Atmos. Environ., vol.203, no. June 2018, pp. 262–270, 2019.
- A. Azhari et al., “Highly spatially resolved emission inventory of selected airpollutants in Kuala Lumpur ’ s urban environment,” Atmos. Pollut. Res., vol. InPress, 2020.
- A. Clappier and P. Thunis, “A probabilistic approach to screen and improveemission inventories,” Atmos. Environ., vol. 242, no. July, p. 117831, 2020.
- T. Coudon et al., “A national inventory of historical dioxin air emissionssources in France,” Atmos. Pollut. Res., vol. 10, no. 4, pp. 1211–1219, 2019.
- B. Das, P. V Bhave, S. P. Puppala, K. Shakya, B. Maharjan, and R. M. Byanju, “Amodel-ready emission inventory for crop residue open burning in the context ofNepal,” Environ. Pollut., vol. 266, p. 115069, 2020.
- E. Winijkul, F. Yan, Z. Lu, D. G. Streets, T. C. Bond, and Y. Zhao, “Size-resolvedglobal emission inventory of primary particulate matter from energy-relatedcombustion sources *,” vol. 107, pp. 137–147, 2015.
- A. De Sousa, L. Hoinaski, T. Barros, and R. Castelan, “A methodology for highresolution vehicular emissions inventories in metropolitan areas : Evaluating theeffect of automotive technologies improvement,” Transp. Res. Part D, vol. 77, pp.303–319, 2019.
- N. Huneeus et al., “Evaluation of anthropogenic air pollutant emissioninventories for South America at national and city scale,” Atmos. Environ., vol.235, p. 117606, 2020.
- D. Majumdar, P. Purohit, A. D. Bhanarkar, P. S. Rao, and P. Rafaj, “Managingfuture air quality in megacities: Emission inventory and scenario analysis for theKolkata Metropolitan City, India1,” Atmos. Environ., vol. 222, p. 117135, 2020.
- S. Mentese et al., “A comprehensive assessment of ambient air quality inÇanakkale city : Emission inventory, air quality monitoring, source apportionment, and respiratory health indicators,” Atmos. Pollut. Res., vol. 11, pp. 2282–2296,2020.
- H. Shahbazi, S. Taghvaee, V. Hosseini, and H. Afshin, “Urban Climate A GISbased emission inventory development for Tehran,” UCLIM, vol. 17, pp. 216–229,2016.
- P. S. Enrique, B. Tomas, B. Lucas, and P. Romina, “High resolutioninventory of atmospheric emissions from livestock production, agriculture, andbiomass burning sectors of Argentina,” Atmos. Environ., vol. 223, p. 117248,2020.
- O. Ghaffarpasand, M. R. Talaie, H. Ahmadikia, A. T. Khozani, and M. D.Shalamzari, “A high-resolution spatial and temporal on-road vehicle emissioninventory in an Iranian metropolitan area, Isfahan, based on detailed hourly trafficdata,” Atmos. Pollut. Res., vol. 11, pp. 1598–1609, 2020.
- Y. Shi, S. Zang, T. Matsunaga, and Y. Yamaguchi, “A multi-year and high-resolution inventory of biomass burning emissions in tropical continents from2001–2017 based on satellite observations,” J. Clean. Prod., vol. 270, p. 122511,2020.
- V. V. Paunu et al., “Spatial distribution of residential wood combustionemissions in the Nordic countries: How well national inventories represent localemissions?,” Atmos. Environ., vol. 264, no. October 2020, 2021.
- P. Jiang, X. Zhong, and L. Li, “On-road vehicle emission inventory and itsspatio-temporal variations,” Environ. Pollut., vol. 267, p. 115639, 2020.
- Y. Zhao, Y. Xia, and Y. Zhou, “Assessment of a high-resolution NO Xemission inventory using satellite observations : A case study of southern Jiangsu,China,” Atmos. Environ., vol. 190, no. X, pp. 135–145, 2018.
- M. Zhou, W. Jiang, W. Gao, B. Zhou, and X. Liao, “A high spatiotemporalresolution anthropogenic VOC emission inventory for Qingdao City in 2016 and itsozone formation potential analysis,” Process Saf. Environ. Prot., vol. 139, pp. 147–160, 2020.
- H. C. Frey and J. Zheng, “Quantification of Variability and Uncertainty in AirPollutant Emission Inventories: Method and Case Study for Utility NO x EmissionsQuantification of Variability and Uncertainty in Air Pollutant Emission Inventories :Method and Case Study for Utility N,” J. Air Waste Manage. Assoc., no. 52, pp.1083–1095, 2011.
- R. Zhang, “High-resolution ammonia emission inventories withcomprehensive analysis and evaluation in Henan, China, 2006–2016,” Atmos.Environ., vol. 193, pp. 11–23, 2018.
- A. Leclerc, S. Sala, M. Secchi, and A. Laurent, “Building national emissioninventories of toxic pollutants in Europe,” Environ. Int., vol. 130, no. March, p.104785, 2019.
- Clarivate, “Journal Impact Factor,” Journal Citation Reports, Web ofScience Group, 2021. [Online]. Available:https://clarivate.com/webofsciencegroup/solutions/journal-citation-reports/?gclid=CjwKCAjwtcCVBhA0EiwAT1fY7xpDAokCMFI1PD5UUTpJC3ZTXvEfYOtdSa0qZAOezhytcv2hWGbW1BoCLDkQAvD_BwE.
- K. Chen et al., “Summertime O 3 and related health risks in the north Chinaplain : A modeling study using two anthropogenic emission inventories,” Atmos.Environ., no. October, p. 118087, 2020.
- A. Elessa Etuman and I. Coll, “OLYMPUS v1.0: Development of anintegrated air pollutant and GHG urban emissions model-methodology andcalibration over greater Paris,” Geosci. Model Dev., vol. 11, no. 12, pp. 5085–5111,2018.
- T. L. Vaughn et al., “Temporal variability largely explains top-down/bottom-up difference in methane emission estimates from a natural gasproduction region,” Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A., vol. 115, no. 46, pp. 11712–11717, 2018.
- P. Thunis, B. Degraeuwe, K. Cuvelier, M. Guevara, L. Tarrason, and A.Clappier, “A novel approach to screen and compare emission inventories,” Air Qual.Atmos. Heal., no. March, pp. 325–333, 2016.
- JRC - Joint Research Centre, “FAIRMODE - Forum for Air quality Modeling.”[Online]. Available: https://fairmode.jrc.ec.europa.eu/home/index. [Accessed: 07-Jul-2022].
- D. G. Streets et al., “Emissions estimation from satellite retrievals: A reviewof current capability,” Atmos. Environ., vol. 77, pp. 1011–1042, Oct. 2013.
- O. E. Salmon et al., “Top-Down Estimates of NOxand CO EmissionsFromWashington, D.C.-Baltimore During theWINTER Campaign,” J. GeophisicalRes. Atmos., no. 10.1029/2018JD028539, pp. 7705–7724.
- M. Hoogwijk et al., “Sectoral Emission Mitigation Potentials: ComparingBottom-Up and Top-Down Approaches,” Toshihiko Masui.
- P. Jiang, X. Chen, Q. Li, H. Mo, and L. Li, “High-resolution emissioninventory of gaseous and particulate pollutants in Shandong Province, easternChina,” J. Clean. Prod., vol. 259, p. 120806, 2020.
- Slovenian Environment Agency, “Slovenian Informative Inventory Report2020,” Ljubljana, 2020.