2014
DOI: 10.1038/ngeo2144
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Reduction in local ozone levels in urban São Paulo due to a shift from ethanol to gasoline use

Abstract: It has been proposed that lower NOX emission fuels such as ethanol can mitigate air pollution from vehicles burning oil-based hydrocarbons. Yet, existing modeling and laboratory studies, even those seeking to simulate the same environment, vary in their predictions of how gasoline/ethanol blends affect atmospheric pollutant concentrations, including ozone. Importantly, ambient concentrations have not been evaluated during an actual -as opposed to hypothetical -shift in fuel mix in a real-world environment. Her… Show more

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Cited by 81 publications
(74 citation statements)
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“…Patterns are consistent with measurements elsewhere, even if for other atmospheric systems, e.g., Davis (2008), Salvo and Geiger (2014). We briefly describe these patterns here, and include descriptive regressions below, as this informs one of our subsequent identification strategies, based on instrumental variables.…”
Section: Data and Descriptive Analysismentioning
confidence: 64%
“…Patterns are consistent with measurements elsewhere, even if for other atmospheric systems, e.g., Davis (2008), Salvo and Geiger (2014). We briefly describe these patterns here, and include descriptive regressions below, as this informs one of our subsequent identification strategies, based on instrumental variables.…”
Section: Data and Descriptive Analysismentioning
confidence: 64%
“…It is considered that the chemical regime remains VOC-limited (Martins and Andrade, 2008a;Sánchez-Ccoyllo et al, 2006). Recent studies suggested that O3 concentrations can be reduced in MASP by shifting from ethanol to gasohol by flex-fuel cars (Martins and Andrade, 2008b), which has in fact been promoted by an increase of ethanol price in 2010 (Salvo and Geiger, 2014).…”
Section: Main Textmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two recent studies (Madronich, 2014;Salvo and Geiger, 2014) Angeles and United States, respectively). In addition, Ginnebaugh and Jacobson (2012) showed that at low temperatures that same fuel (85% ethanol; 15% gasoline) can enhance ozone production significantly more than does gasoline.…”
Section: Ozonementioning
confidence: 99%