Current:Home > StocksPigeon Power: The Future of Air Pollution Monitoring in a Tiny Backpack? -Edge Finance Strategies
Pigeon Power: The Future of Air Pollution Monitoring in a Tiny Backpack?
View
Date:2025-04-11 17:42:36
A flock of specially trained, backpack-wearing racing pigeons conducted sorties over London last week in a novel air pollution monitoring campaign.
Though the event was largely a publicity stunt, the lightweight monitoring devices worn by the birds could transform how humans track their own exposure to a variety of airborne toxins.
“The idea is to raise awareness of pollution that is interactive and easily accessible and that strikes the mind enough to create mass awareness of the topic of air pollution,” said Romain Lacombe, chief executive of Plume Labs, the air monitoring technology company behind last week’s flights.
“Most people are very familiar with what is at stake to reduce CO2 emissions, but there seems to be much less of an understanding of how bad polluting emissions are for our health and the staggering size of the public health issue.”
Over three days, The Pigeon Air Patrol, a flock of 10 birds trained for racing, flew point-to-point over the city. Two of the birds carried sensors that measured the concentration of nitrogen dioxide and ozone, two main gases that make urban air pollution so toxic. A third pigeon recorded the flock’s location with a small GPS device. Members of the public were able to track the birds on the Pigeon Air Patrol website and get pollution readings from their monitors by tweeting @PigeonAir.
Plume Labs and collaborators DigitasLBi, a marketing and technology company, and social media company Twitter will now work with researchers at Imperial College in London to test similar monitors on 100 people throughout the city. Data from the devices, which will monitor levels of volatile organic compounds as well as nitrogen dioxide and ozone, could be a boon to health researchers by allowing them to track individuals’ exposure over a given period of time as they move about the city.
“Having that ability to be able to monitor easily, cheaply, in a way that doesn’t require a lot of involvement either from the researcher or from the participant in these studies is just a complete game changer for epidemiology,” said collaborator Audrey de Nazelle, a lecturer in air pollution management at the Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College.
Current air monitoring by government agencies typically relies on fixed stations that do not include indoor air monitoring where people spend the majority of their time.
If successful, the devices, each of which will cost roughly $150 and clip onto clothing or other accessories, could allow concerned individuals or groups to conduct their own air quality measurements. Future sensors could potentially also measure for other pollutants such as carbon dioxide, methane and benzene, a known carcinogen that is toxic even at low doses.
Residents in Los Angeles County for example, continue to suffer adverse health effects from a recent natural gas leak, the largest in US history. Individual air monitoring during and after the event could have provided a clearer picture of residents’ exposure to potentially harmful gases. Health officials have yet to conduct indoor air monitoring in homes near the leak and are unable to explain the cause of ongoing illnesses that have occurred since residents returned to their homes.
Often when oil pipeline spills and related incidents occur, air monitoring in affected communities begins too late to determine what people were initially exposed to, and how much. Crude oil contains hundreds of chemicals, including benzene.
Plume Labs executives say the mobile air monitors could augment the company’s air quality forecasts that it currently offers based on government sources for 300 cities around the world.
“There is a lot governments can do to be more transparent about the environment, but they are also limited by the amount of data they can gather,” Lacombe said. “Using distributed sensors we can hopefully provide an even more high fidelity image.”
veryGood! (6459)
Related
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Father of missing girl Harmony Montgomery insists he didn’t kill his daughter
- Let’s Make a Deal Host Wayne Brady Comes Out as Pansexual
- Wayfair’s Anniversary Sale Is Here: 70% Off Deals You Must See
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- U.S. Navy sends 4 destroyers to Alaska coast after 11 Chinese, Russian warships spotted in nearby waters
- Wisconsin governor calls special legislative session on increasing child care funding
- Thousands of Marines, sailors deploy to Middle East to deter Iran from seizing ships
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Russia court sentences Alexey Navalny, jailed opposition leader and Putin critic, to 19 more years in prison
Ranking
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Leader of Texas’ largest county takes leave from job for treatment of clinical depression
- Proposed protective order would infringe on Trump's free speech, his lawyers say
- Apple 24-Hour Flash Deal: Save $429 on a MacBook Air Laptop Bundle
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Stay inside as dangerous stormy weather lashes northern Europe, officials say. 2 people have died
- CDC says COVID variant EG.5 is now dominant, including strain some call Eris
- Ex-student accused in California stabbing deaths is mentally unfit for trial
Recommendation
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
Jon Batiste says his new album connects people to their own humanity and others
Wayne Brady of 'Let's Make a Deal' comes out as pansexual: 'I have to love myself'
US has 'direct contact' with Niger's coup leaders but conversations are 'difficult'
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
Man fatally shoots 8-year-old Chicago girl, gunman shot in struggle over weapon, police say
Men often struggle with penis insecurity. But no one wants to talk about it.
New Hampshire is sued over removal of marker dedicated to Communist Party leader