Air quality in Brunei Darussalam during the 1998 haze episode

Citation
M. Radojevic et H. Hassan, Air quality in Brunei Darussalam during the 1998 haze episode, ATMOS ENVIR, 33(22), 1999, pp. 3651-3658
Citations number
9
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology,"Earth Sciences
Journal title
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT
ISSN journal
13522310 → ACNP
Volume
33
Issue
22
Year of publication
1999
Pages
3651 - 3658
Database
ISI
SICI code
1352-2310(199909)33:22<3651:AQIBDD>2.0.ZU;2-U
Abstract
Regional haze from biomass burning in SE Asia is a recurring air pollution phenomenon with a potential impact on the health of several hundred million people. Air quality data in Brunei Darussalam during the 1998 haze episode revealed that only particulate matter is a significant pollutant. The WHO guideline of 70 mu g m(-3) for PM10 (24 h average) was exceeded on 54 days during the haze episode which lasted from 1 February to 30 April 1998. Conc entrations of SO2, NO2, and O-3 were all below WHO guidelines and the 8 h g uideline for CO was exceeded on only seven occasions. Average daily PM10 co ncentrations were below 450 mu g m(-3) but concentrations greater than 600 mu g m(-3) persisted for several hours at a time and total exposure to such high concentrations could add up to several days over the course of a haze episode. Airborne particles exhibited diurnal variation, typically rising through the night to very high levels in the early morning and thereafter d ecreasing due largely to meteorological factors. The pollutant standards in dex (PSI), widely used to report urban air quality, may not be suitable for haze from forest fires as it does not take into account short-term exposur e to extremely high particle concentrations of up to 1 mg m(-3). (C) 1999 E lsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.