Integrated Air Quality Information for Kampala: Analysis of PM2.5, Emission Sources, Modelled Contributions, and Institutional Framework
Abstract
Kampala, the political and economic capital of Uganda and one of the fastest urbanizing cities in sub-Saharan Africa, is experiencing a deteriorating trend in air quality. This decline is driven by emissions from multiple diffuse local sources, including transportation, domestic and outdoor cooking, and industries, as well as by sources outside the city airshed, such as seasonal open fires in the region. PM2.5 (particulate matter under 2.5 μm size) is the key pollutant of concern in the city with monthly spatial heterogeneity of 60-100 μg/m3. Outdoor air pollution is distinctly pronounced in the global south cities and lack the necessary capacity and resources to develop integrated air quality management programs including ambient monitoring, emissions and pollution analysis, source apportionment, and preparation of clean air action plans. This paper presents the first comprehensive integrated assessment of air quality in Kampala to define a multi-level intervention framework, utilizing ground measurements from a hybrid network of stations, global reanalysis fields from GEOS-Chem and CAMS simulations, a high-resolution (~1 km) multi-pollutant emissions inventory for the designated airshed, WRF-CAMx-based PM2.5 pollution analysis, and a qualitative review of the institutional and policy environment in Kampala. This collation of information documents baseline data for all known sectors, providing a foundational resource for the development of a clean air action plan. The proposed plan aims for better air quality in the region using a combination of short-, medium-, and long-term emission control measures for all the dominate sources and institutionalize pollution tracking mechanisms (like emissions and pollution monitoring and reporting) for effective management of air pollution.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Air Quality in Emerging Economic Regions