Fuente: News
  Expuesto el: miércoles, 18 de julio de 2012 12:18
  Autor: News
  Asunto: Significant reduction in pollution achieved by creating green  walls
| Posted on Wednesday 18th July    2012 Scientists at the    Universities of Birmingham and Lancaster (UK) argue that by ‘greening up’ our    streets a massive 30% reduction in pollution could be achieved, according to    research published today (18 July 2012) in the journal Environmental Science    and Technology. Trees, bushes and other    greenery growing in the concrete-and-glass ‘urban canyons’ of cities would    deliver cleaner air at the roadside where most of us are exposed to the    highest pollution levels, and could be implemented street-by-street without    the need for large-scale and expensive initiatives. Plants in cities clean    the air by removing nitrogen dioxide and microscopic particulate matter, both    of which are harmful to human health. These pollutants are significant    problems in cities in developed and developing countries: UK Government    Environmental Audit Committee estimates are that outdoor air pollution causes    35,000-50,000 premature deaths per year in the UK, while the World Health    Organization’s outdoor air quality database puts the figure at more than 1    million worldwide. The researchers have    found that, because pollution cannot easily escape street canyons, ‘green    walls’ of grass, climbing ivy and other plants have a better opportunity than    previously thought to act as an air pollution filter. Instead of reducing    pollution by 1 or 2%, reductions of more than ten times this magnitude could    be achieved, according to this study. Using a computer model    that captures the trapping of air in street canyons, as well as the hundreds of    chemical reactions that can affect pollution concentrations, the research    team could distinguish the effects of plants in canyons from those of plants    in parks or on roofs. Green walls emerged as clear winners in terms of    pollutant removal. Street trees were also effective, but only in less    polluted streets where the tree crowns did not cause pollution to be trapped    at ground level. The researchers even    suggest building plant-covered "green billboards" in these urban    canyons to increase the amount of foliage. For the first time, the    study predicts that a significant effect on pollution could be achieved on a    street-by-street basis. Professor Rob MacKenzie, from the University of    Birmingham’s School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, said: ‘Up until now, every initiative    around reducing pollution has taken a top-down approach – scrapping old cars,    adding catalytic converters to cars, and bringing in the congestion charge –    some of which have not had the desired effect. Ends Notes to Editors For further information 
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