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NO₂ Emission Estimation in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Using Modeling and OMI Satellite Data

Bull Environ Contam Toxicol. 2025 Nov 16;115(6):69. doi: 10.1007/s00128-025-04144-4.

ABSTRACT

Nitrogen dioxide (NO₂) in the air at concentrations exceeding permissible levels impacts environmental quality and human health. In addition, NO₂ is also a precursor to ozone and an agent that creates acid rain that affects the habitat of organisms. NO₂ emission inventories are the first and most important step, especially in urban or industrial production areas. This study assesses NO₂ emissions in Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC), Vietnam-a large city with high traffic and industrial activity but limited published emission data. Using the Lifetime-Modified Accumulation Method (LMAM), we analyze tropospheric NO₂ column data from the OMI/Aura satellite (2019-2024) to estimate spatial and temporal emission trends. The results showed an average emission rate of 6.56 × 1015 molecules cm⁻2 h⁻1 in 2019, decreasing to 5.79 × 1015 molecules cm⁻2 h⁻1 in 2020 due to the COVID-19 lockdown. Emissions were highest in urban and industrial areas and lowest in suburban areas. The LMAM model demonstrated a strong correlation with TROPESS Chemical Reanalysis (TCR) NOx data (Spearman’s r = 0.71 in 2019; r = 0.70 in 2020), confirming its reliability for trend analysis. Long-term trends reflect the socioeconomic impact: a sharp decline during the pandemic (2020-2021) followed by a recovery to 1.3 × 101⁶ molecules cm⁻2 h⁻1 in 2023-2024 when economic activities resume. This result can provide information on NO₂ emissions as a reference for future city emission control policies and inventory plans.

PMID:41242983 | DOI:10.1007/s00128-025-04144-4

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