Effect of land use changes on air quality: impacts of urbanization, urban vegetation, and agriculture
Article 2025 en
Authors
GV
Gara Villaba
AB
Alba Badía
RS
Ricard Segura
Abstract
1 min read
Urbanization converts natural landscapes into impervious surfaces, altering local climate and air quality. Greening strategies are adopted to mitigate these effects, yet their effectiveness depends on land use, urban form, geography, and climate interactions. Using an air quality model with an urban canopy scheme, we evaluate how land use changes-urban expansion, agriculture, and parks-affect urban climate and chemical processes, influencing air pollutants like NO<sub>2</sub>, O<sub>3</sub>, VOCs, and PMs. Applied to future land-use scenarios in the Metropolitan Area of Barcelona, our results show that a 45-55% increase in urbanization raises surface temperatures and consequently evening O<sub>3</sub> levels by up to 8%. Replacing 6-10% of urban land and 30-40% of natural vegetation areas into agriculture reduces O<sub>3</sub> by up to 10%, but increases NH<sub>3</sub> (up to 90%) and aerosols (up to 12%). Doubling urban green spaces reduce NO<sub>2</sub> (up to 3%) and increases O<sub>3</sub> (up to 5%) and SOA (up to 14%). Our study emphasizes the trade-offs of urban greening and the need for integrated planning to improve air quality.
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