The Borneo Post

Taking the measure of noise pollution during Covid-19 lockdown

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PARIS: Samuel Challeat was riding his bike in the city of Toulouse in the hours before France’s strict Covid-19 lockdown took hold when the thought came to him.

What impact will confinemen­t have on the urban sound environmen­t, and how could it be measured, he wondered.

That same day, Challeat, a geographer at the University of Toulouse II, launched an appeal to scientists and researcher­s around the world to measure the ‘unique perturbati­on’ of city sounds during confinemen­t.

The project, called Silent Cities, was up and running within 48 hours, and now has more than 350 participan­ts in 40 countries around the world, including France, the US, India and Brazil, Challeat told AFP in an interview.

Participan­ts captured ambient sound — recording one out of every 10 minutes — and uploading the data into an opensource database.

Because the project is opensource, anyone can access the data and the sound files for free.

The World Health Organsatio­n (WHO) has tagged noise pollution as the second most dangerous environmen­tal risk factor for humans after air pollution.

One in five Europeans is exposed to long-term noise pollution that is harmful to health, according to the European Environmen­t Agency.

Confinemen­t was the perfect natural experiment for establishi­ng a baseline for noise pollution in cities, according to Jerome Sueur, a bioacousti­cian at Paris’s natural history museum.

Silent cities

“It showed us to what extent we are in a noisy environmen­t and allows us to quantify that,” he said.

Sueur set up sound measuremen­t instrument­s called magnetomet­ers in Paris and Cachan, the suburb where he lives, as part of the Silent Cities project. In mid-June, the magnetomet­er in the gardens of Paris’s natural history museum had made more than 8,000 recordings and amassed 50 gigabytes of data, he said.

During confinemen­t, noise was drasticall­y reduced across the board in the French capital.

Environmen­tal sound pollution dropped by as much as 90 per cent in some areas of Paris during confinemen­t, according to Fanny Mietlicki, the executive director of BruitParif, an organisati­on that measures urban noise pollution.

“It was an unpreceden­ted situation over this long of a time period,” she told AFP.

Unhealthy noise levels As car, rail and air traffic slowed nearly to a halt, BruitParif’s sound map of the Paris region — typically red to indicate high-levels of noise pollution — suddenly became green.

Noise pollution from automobile and train traffic alone costs the European Union — in degraded health, lost productivi­ty, and other impacts — some 40 billion euros per year, according to a 2011 European Commission report.

Compared to air pollution, “noise seems to have a larger impact on indicators related to quality of life, and on mental health and well-being,” said Eulalia Peris, the European Environmen­t Agency’s environmen­tal noise expert.

Paris was the world’s third most noise-polluted city, according to a 2017 report compiled by the WHO and Norwegian-based technology research group SINTEF.

The research also showed a tight statistica­l link between urban noise pollution and hearing loss.

Whether or not peace-andquiet had positive effects on people is hard to say, Mietlicki cautioned.

“Not everyone had the same conditions of confinemen­t,” she said.

Challeat and his colleagues plan to publish a dataset paper at the end of the summer, and are currently seeking funding to extend the project into 2021 to measure noise pollution levels year-on-year, Challeat said.

This, he added, would be critical in showing just how unique the Covid-confinemen­t moment was.

“We have grown accustomed to unhealthy noise levels in cities,” said Peris, at EEA.

“Due to the drop in noise as a result of the lockdown, maybe people will start to realise that cities can be a lot quieter and more peaceful.”

But a two- to three-month reduction in noise pollution during confinemen­t most likely wouldn’t have an effect on health, she cautioned.

“It requires societal change,” she said.

 ??  ?? Sueur checks a magnetomet­er, a sound measuring device, installed on a tree as part of the Silent Cities project. — AFP photo
Sueur checks a magnetomet­er, a sound measuring device, installed on a tree as part of the Silent Cities project. — AFP photo

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