The Prince George Citizen

City’s air quality improving

- Citizen staff

Prince George’s air quality is getting better because of the work by the city’s heavy industry, according to UNBC researcher­s.

Environmen­tal science professor Peter Jackson and a group of undergradu­ate and graduate students analyzed 12 years of air quality data in Prince George. The group found that the largest improvemen­t in air quality is when the wind pushes the air from the heavy industrial zone into the city centre.

“When winds come from the east, which is carrying the air from the heavy industrial zone, the trend over the past 12 years is a pronounced decrease in the fine particulat­e matter in the air,” Jackson explains.

The students worked closely with the Prince George Air Improvemen­t Roundtable (PGAIR) and presented their findings to the organizati­on’s board of directors.

Among the findings are that fine particulat­e matter decreased overall by 29 per cent in the last 12 years, but that was primarily driven by decreases of 35 per cent when the wind came from the east.

Industrial plants in Prince George have been investing in technology to reduce the amount of particulat­e matter released into the air for the past decade but measuring the effectiven­ess of their investment­s has been a challenge, according to Jackson.

“We know that industry, especially the pulp mills, have been spending hundreds of millions of dollars on upgrades that reduce the amount of particulat­e matter they release into the air,”Jackson said.

“It has been frustratin­g not being able to detect that in the actual monitoring data, but this study suggests that what they are doing is working.”

 ?? UNBC HANDOUT PHOTO ?? Cody Birch, Jordan Pawluk, UNBC professor Peter Jackson, Taras Tereshchak, Brayden Nilson and James Albino (not pictured), published a paper based on a class research project analyzing 12 years of Prince George air quality data.
UNBC HANDOUT PHOTO Cody Birch, Jordan Pawluk, UNBC professor Peter Jackson, Taras Tereshchak, Brayden Nilson and James Albino (not pictured), published a paper based on a class research project analyzing 12 years of Prince George air quality data.

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