Department of Urban & Regional Planning, Bangladesh University of Engineering & Technology (BUET), Dhaka, Bangladesh; School of Environmental Science and Management, Independent University, Bangladesh.
Department of Geography & the Environment, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, 78712, USA.
Environ Pollut. 2024 Nov 15;361:124877. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2024.124877. Epub 2024 Sep 2.
Air quality degradation presents a significant public health challenge, particularly in rapidly urbanizing regions where changes in land use/land cover (LULC) can dramatically influence pollution levels. This study investigates the association between LULC changes and air pollution (AP) in the five fastest-growing cities of Bangladesh from 1998 to 2021. Leveraging satellite data from Landsat and Sentinel-5P, the analysis reveals a substantial increase in urban areas and sparse vegetation, with declines in dense vegetation and water bodies over this period. Urban expansion was most pronounced in Sylhet (22-254%), while Khulna experienced the largest increase in sparse vegetation (2-124%). Dense vegetation loss was highest in Dhaka (20-77%) and water bodies (9-59%) over this period. Concentrations of six major air pollutants (APTs) - aerosol index, CO, HCHO, NO, O, and SO - were quantified, showing alarmingly high levels in densely populated industrial and commercial zones. Pearson's correlation indicates strong positive associations between APTs and urban land indices (R > 0.8), while negative correlations exist with vegetation indices. Geographically weighted regression modeling identifies city centers with dense urban built-up as pollution hotspots, where APTs exhibited stronger impacts on land cover changes (R > 0.8) compared to other land classes. The highest daily emissions were observed for O (1031 tons) and CO (356 tons) at Chittagong in 2021. In contrast, areas with substantial green cover displayed weaker pollutant-land cover associations. These findings underscore how unplanned urbanization drives AP by replacing natural land cover with emission sources, providing crucial insights to guide sustainable urban planning strategies integrating pollution mitigation and environmental resilience.
空气质量恶化对公共健康构成重大挑战,特别是在城市化快速发展的地区,土地利用/土地覆盖变化(LULC)可能会显著影响污染水平。本研究调查了 1998 年至 2021 年期间孟加拉国五个发展最快的城市的土地利用/土地覆盖变化与空气污染(AP)之间的关联。本研究利用 Landsat 和 Sentinel-5P 的卫星数据,分析发现该时期城市面积和稀疏植被显著增加,密集植被和水体减少。在此期间,锡尔赫特的城市扩张最为显著(22-254%),而库尔纳的稀疏植被增加最多(2-124%)。在此期间,达卡的密集植被损失最高(20-77%),而水体损失最高(9-59%)。六种主要空气污染物(APTs)——气溶胶指数、CO、HCHO、NO、O 和 SO——的浓度进行了量化,结果表明人口稠密的工业和商业区的污染物浓度极高。Pearson 相关性分析表明,APTs 与城市土地指数之间存在很强的正相关关系(R>0.8),而与植被指数之间存在负相关关系。地理加权回归模型确定了密集城市建成区的城市中心为污染热点,在这些热点地区,APTs 对土地覆盖变化的影响更强(R>0.8),与其他土地类别相比。2021 年,在吉大港,O(1031 吨)和 CO(356 吨)的日排放量最高。相比之下,有大量绿色植被的地区,污染物与土地覆盖的相关性较弱。这些发现强调了无计划的城市化如何通过用排放源替代自然土地覆盖来推动空气污染,为指导可持续城市规划战略提供了关键见解,这些战略整合了污染缓解和环境弹性。