Explicit modeling of meteorological explanatory variables in short-term forecasting of maximum ozone concentrations via a multiple regression time series framework
Academic Article in Scopus
Overview
Identity
Additional document info
View All
Overview
abstract
© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.Statistical time series forecasting is a useful tool for predicting air pollutant concentrations in urban areas, especially in emerging economies, where the capacity to implement comprehensive air quality models is limited. In this study, a general multiple regression with seasonal autoregressive moving average errors model was estimated and implemented to forecast maximum ozone concentrations with a short time resolution: overnight, morning, afternoon and evening. In contrast to a number of short-term air quality time series forecasting applications, the model was designed to explicitly include the effects of meteorological variables on the ozone level as exogenous variables. As the application location, the model was constructed with data from five monitoring stations in the Monterrey Metropolitan Area of Mexico. The results show that, together with structural stochastic components, meteorological parameters have a significant contribution for obtaining reliable forecasts. The resulting model is an interpretable, useful and easily implementable model for forecasting ozone maxima. Moreover, it proved to be consistent with the general dynamics of ozone formation and provides a suitable platform for forecasting, showing similar or better performance compared to models in other existing studies.
status
publication date
published in
Identity
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Additional document info
has global citation frequency
start page
end page
volume