Skip to main content

Albuquerque trailer monitors air quality 

The trailer is also expected to monitor 75 hazardous air pollutants 
By Ben Spencer November 1, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Albuquerque air quality data is expected to provide an insight to better understand public health concerns (© Brian Weed | Dreamstime.com)

The New Mexico city of Albuquerque is to place an air quality monitoring trailer in the San Jose neighbourhood following community concerns over pollution from nearby industry.

The City of Albuquerque Government says the trailer expands the current pollutant monitoring network from five to six stations throughout Albuquerque-Bernalillo County.

Albuquerque mayor Tim Keller says: “Albuquerque is fortunate to have good air quality especially for a city our size, but not all neighbourhoods benefit the same. Historically underserved neighbourhoods like San Jose can be disproportionately impacted. With this mobile air monitoring station, we’re bringing equity to environmental justice and public health.”

The monitoring trailer can be parked in different neighbourhoods to collect localised air quality data to better understand the specific pollutants the area may be experiencing. It must be parked in a chosen location for a minimum of 12 months but used up to three years to collect accurate data and any seasonal variations. 

The trailer is also expected to monitor 75 hazardous air pollutants including, volatile organic compounds.

Mara Elana Burstein, environmental health deputy director at the city of Albuquerque, says: “Capturing air quality data at the neighbourhood level will provide us valuable insight to better understand public health concerns. The Air Quality Program is enthusiastically looking for ways to innovatively engage with the community and begin to equitably address environmental justice.”

Deanna Marie Barela, San Jose Neighbourhood Association president, says: “This monitoring system has given us hope that will shed light to the harmful effects that polluted air can cause in a community as well as open an extension to other communication to better the neighbourhood of San Jose and to ensure that this community is not left behind.”

The trailer was unveiled by the City of Albuquerque Environmental Health Department and will be parked at the East San Jose Pool.

New Mexico Albuquerque San Jose neighbourhood air quality monitoring trailer

Environmental Health Dept [left to right] Richard Carrion (environmental health specialist II), Dwyane Salisbury (environmental health manager), Mara Elana Burstein (deputy director of environmental health) and Christella Armijo (environmental health scientist)

 

 


 

Related Content

  • Tolling Matters: Getting the balance right
    January 18, 2023
    The concept of road usage charging (RUC) is slowly coming to the fore. But it isn’t just a question of good fiscal sense – it’s about promoting equity and ensuring sustainability too, says Scott Jacobs of Emovis
  • UK transport planning not giving sufficient priority to air quality, say researchers
    August 31, 2016
    According to two university researchers, UK transport planning is not sufficiently taking into account the environmental impacts of transport choices. Their report, which is due to be presented at the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) Annual International Conference today, says that road transport is the principal cause of air pollution in over 95 per cent of legally designated “Air Quality Management Areas” in the UK. Current estimates are that over 50,000 deaths a year can be attributed to air polluti
  • VivaCity senses change in the air in Sheffield
    September 7, 2023
    Sensors will assess whether UK city's Clean Air Zone is cutting harmful levels of NO2
  • Bill Halkias: 'We need a sustainable world'
    April 20, 2021
    In the first of our Tolling Matters interview series, Bill Halkias, MD & CEO of Attica Tollway Operations Authority and president of the International Road Federation, talks to Adam Hill about post-Covid recovery and sustainable mobility