Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6962051 | Environmental Modelling & Software | 2018 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
A number of software tools exist to estimate the health and economic impacts associated with air quality changes. Over the past 15 years, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and its partners invested substantial time and resources in developing the Environmental Benefits Mapping and Analysis Program - Community Edition (BenMAP-CE). BenMAP-CE is a publicly available, PC-based open source software program that can be configured to conduct health impact assessments to inform air quality policies anywhere in the world. The developers coded the platform in C# and made the source code available in GitHub, with the goal of building a collaborative relationship with programmers with expertise in other environmental modeling programs. The team recently improved the BenMAP-CE user experience and incorporated new features, while also building a cadre of analysts and BenMAP-CE training instructors in Latin America and Southeast Asia.
Keywords
MSDENAAQSCOIGBDWTPVSLDLLsPM2.5Benefits analysisAir pollutionvalue of a statistical lifeHealth impact assessmentNational Ambient Air Quality StandardsOzoneGlobal burden of diseasePolicy analysisWillingness-to-paySO2Sulfur dioxideparticulate matterGraphical user interfaceGUIGISLeadGeographic information systemNitrogen dioxideNO2Cost-of-illnessAir quality
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Software
Authors
Jason D. Sacks, Jennifer M. Lloyd, Yun Zhu, Jim Anderton, Carey J. Jang, Bryan Hubbell, Neal Fann,