Brazil - Particulate matter concentration

PM10, country level (micrograms per cubic meter)

The value for PM10, country level (micrograms per cubic meter) in Brazil was 19.46 as of 2009. As the graph below shows, over the past 19 years this indicator reached a maximum value of 39.79 in 1992 and a minimum value of 19.46 in 2009.

Definition: Particulate matter concentrations refer to fine suspended particulates less than 10 microns in diameter (PM10) that are capable of penetrating deep into the respiratory tract and causing significant health damage. Data for countries and aggregates for regions and income groups are urban-population weighted PM10 levels in residential areas of cities with more than 100,000 residents. The estimates represent the average annual exposure level of the average urban resident to outdoor particulate matter. The state of a country's technology and pollution controls is an important determinant of particulate matter concentrations.

Source: Kiran Dev Pandey, David Wheeler, Bart Ostro, Uwe Deichmann, Kirk Hamilton, and Katherine Bolt. ""Ambient Particulate Matter Concentrations in Residential and Pollution Hotspot Areas of World Cities: New Estimates Based on the Global Model of Ambient Particulates (GMAPS),"" World Bank, Development Research Group and Environment Department (2006).

See also:

Year Value
1990 39.07
1991 39.48
1992 39.79
1993 38.58
1994 36.46
1995 32.31
1996 31.18
1997 30.34
1998 30.26
1999 32.66
2000 31.56
2001 32.20
2002 31.50
2003 29.07
2004 27.08
2005 24.68
2006 22.66
2007 21.39
2008 20.85
2009 19.46

Classification

Topic: Environment Indicators

Sub-Topic: Emissions