Air Quality in Termez, Uzbekistan: Assessment of Key Emission Sources and Recommendations for Enhancing Air Quality Monitoring and Management

United Nations 3 months ago

This publication presents the first comprehensive scientific assessment of air quality in the city of Termez, Uzbekistan, developed by UNEP and the Finnish Meteorological Institute. It analyzes 20 months of automatic monitoring data, satellite observations, and local emission inventories to identify key pollution sources and characterize seasonal patterns, including major contributions from sand and dust storms, winter heating, agriculture, and transport. The report offers detailed technical findings, including particulate matter trends, pollutant–meteorology interactions, and spatial emission mapping, and highlights significant health risks associated with persistently elevated particulate matter levels. It provides evidence-based recommendations for strengthening air quality management, improving monitoring and quality assurance and control systems, advancing source apportionment and health impact assessments, and guiding local and national policy action toward cleaner air and enhanced public health protection.
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layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 10 hours ago



England’s first Land Use Framework sets a benchmark for sustainable construction by embedding integrated planning across housing, energy and nature. It defines a new standard for sustainable building design that prioritises whole life carbon assessment and reduction of embodied carbon in materials. Projects that combine housing density with renewable energy generation and biodiversity enhancement will align most effectively with environmental sustainability in construction.

Policy efforts to allow single wind turbines up to 30 metres on business or public estates without full planning consent will stimulate low carbon design and accelerate the shift to energy-efficient buildings. Rising electricity costs reinforce the commercial value of life cycle cost analysis and lifecycle assessment in both retrofit and new build strategies. The focus is moving from headline technologies to fabric upgrades, controls, demand management and end-of-life reuse in construction—core aspects of circular economy in construction models that aim to cut the carbon footprint of construction portfolios.

Nature-based solutions now underpin green infrastructure policy. Research into moss and other renewable building materials shows the potential of green construction interventions to manage stormwater and pollution through low-impact construction techniques. These examples affirm the circular construction strategies and eco-design for buildings that the industry must mainstream to achieve net zero carbon buildings.

Developers integrating whole life carbon measurement, resource efficiency in construction and sustainable material specification will not only strengthen environmental performance but also reduce project risk within the evolving regulatory landscape. The transition towards a circular economy, carbon neutral construction and sustainable urban development is positioning the sector closer to net zero whole life carbon delivery, redefining sustainable building practices across the UK and beyond.

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