This Solicitation opportunity from Government of Canada was posted on November 10, 2023. The submission period has ended. Browse the details below for market research, or find similar active opportunities.
Air pollution data at high temporal and spatial resolution across Canada: Emission adjusted Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) and Hybrid Modeling
Closed
1000252496CanadaSubmission Closed
Contract Overview
Solicitation details, issuing organization, response deadlines, documents, and interested companies for this government contract opportunity.
General Info
Agency
Government of Canada → Wesley PhillipsView Agency
NAICS
N/A
Place of Performance
*National Capital Region (NCR), CANSet-Aside
NONE
Documents
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Timeline
PhaseClosed
Submission Closed
Organization & Contact Information
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AgencyGovernment of Canada → Wesley Phillips
Contacts1 person available
OfficeN/A
Office AddressN/A
Contacts
Full Description
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The Air Quality Health index (AQHI) is a communication tool, which sums adverse health risks associated with three major air pollutants, ground-level ozone (O3), nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and fine particulate matter (PM2.5), to provide guidance on daily outdoor activities to the public to protect their health from outdoor air pollution. The AQHI is therefore based on mainly two databases: public health data and outdoor air pollution data. The main source of outdoor air pollutant concentrations is the National Air Pollution Surveillance (NAPS) program, which provides accurate and long-term air quality data across Canada. NAPS was established in 1969 to monitor and assess the quality of ambient air in the populated regions (i.e. urban areas) of Canada. Starting with 36 monitoring sites for Canada-wide database, today 286 sites in 203 communities are located in every province and territory. Even if the number of NAPS ground-monitoring stations has increased and its spatial coverage has extended, there is still a concern that Canadians living in rural areas are not covered by NAPS stations and therefore have been underrepresented in the air pollution related programs including the AQHI.
The project has three objectives to address the concerns related to the estimated concentrations of air pollution across Canada:
(1) improved models (e.g., emission adjusted CMAQ and Hybrid models) to better estimate the four air pollutants (O3, NO2, SO2 and PM2.5) for the years 2018-2020;
(2) extended spatial coverage to include rural areas (high spatial coverage); and
(3) extended temporal coverage with hourly air pollution concentrations in addition to daily and yearly averaged air pollution.
