To what extent the traffic restriction policies applied in Barcelona city can improve its air quality?

  • Daniel Rodriguez-Rey*
  • , Marc Guevara
  • , Mª Paz Linares
  • , Josep Casanovas
  • , Jan M. Armengol
  • , Jaime Benavides
  • , Albert Soret
  • , Oriol Jorba
  • , Carles Tena
  • , Carlos Pérez García-Pando
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

63 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Barcelona city (Spain) is applying a series of traffic restriction measures that aim at renewing and reducing the amount of circulating vehicles to improve air quality. The measures include changes in the built environment to reduce private vehicle space in specific areas through the so-called “superblocks” and tactical urban planning actions, along with the implementation of a city-wide Low Emission Zone (LEZ) that restricts the entry of the most polluting vehicles to the city. Our study quantifies the impact of these measures in the greater area of Barcelona combining a coupled macroscopic traffic and pollutant emission model with a multi-scale air quality model. Our modelling system allows estimating the effect of different traffic restrictions upon traffic and the associated emissions and air quality levels at a very high resolution (20 m). The measures were evaluated both individually and collectively to assess both their relative and overall impact upon emissions and air quality. We show that in the absence of traffic demand reductions, the application of isolated measures that reduce private vehicle space, either through superblocks or tactical urban planning, have no overall emission impacts; only localized street-level NOx positive and negative changes (±17%) are found due to traffic re-routing and the generation of new bottlenecks. It is only when these measures are combined with optimistic fleet renewal as a result of the LEZ implementation and demand reductions, that relevant global emission reductions in NOx are obtained (−13% and −30%, respectively) with estimated NO2 reductions of −36% and −23% at the two traffic air quality monitoring stations. Despite the potential improvements, our simulations suggest that current measures are insufficient to comply with EU air quality standards and that further traffic restriction policies to reduce traffic demand are needed.

Original languageEnglish
Article number150743
JournalScience of the Total Environment
Volume807
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Feb 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Barcelona
  • Multi-scale air quality modelling
  • Traffic management strategies
  • Traffic simulation
  • Vehicle emissions

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