EPA Offers up to $80,000 to Communities to Develop Air Sensor Data Best Practices
By Ann Dunkin, Chief Information Officer
SMART CITIES AIR CHALLENGE INFORMATION
Application Deadline: October 28, 2016
Announcement of Winners: Around December 1, 2016
Initial award: Up to $40,000 each to two communities to deploy air sensors, share data with the public, and develop data management best practices from sensors
Additional funding: Up to $10,000 each to the winning communities in 2017 based on their accomplishments and collaboration.
To learn more, visit the Smart City Air Challenge website.
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I came to the EPA with a firm belief that data can make a difference in environmental protection. Since I’ve been here I’ve found that communities are leading the way by using data to understand local conditions and operate efficiently. That’s why I’m excited to announce EPA’s Smart City Air Challenge.
This new challenge encourages communities to install hundreds of air quality sensors and manage the resulting data. EPA is offering two communities up to $40,000 each to work with their residents to crowdsource air quality data and share it with the public online. The projects will give individuals a role in collecting the data and understanding how environmental conditions affect their health and their community.
Air quality sensors are becoming less expensive and people are beginning to use them to measure pollution levels in their neighborhoods and homes. They’re developing rapidly, but most sensors aren’t ready for regulatory use. However, by networking these devices, communities can better understand what is happening at the local level. Communities will figure out where to place the sensors and how to maintain the devices. It’s up to each community to decide what pollutants they want to measure.
The prize funds serve as seed money, so communities will need to partner with other parties, such as sensor manufacturers, data management companies and universities. These partners can provide resources and expertise in topics where communities lack experience. In doing so, communities will learn how to use data analytics, which can be applied to other aspects of community life.
What does EPA get out of this? We’ll learn how communities collect, store and manage large amounts of data. We’ll also get a better understanding of the quality of data communities collect using sensors for non-regulatory purposes. We’ll see how communities transfer data from sensors to databases and visualize the results. Finally, the sensors will produce as much as 150 gigabytes of open data a year —data anyone can use.
EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy often says communities are “incubators for innovation.” We’re hoping the challenge will inspire communities to come up with innovative approaches for managing data so their residents and other communities can benefit. Show us how it’s done.
Jason
Aug 31, 2016 @ 02:48:54
Nice share
John bosch
Aug 31, 2016 @ 09:11:09
My EPA data management began in 1971 with the national emissions and air quality systems. My interest continues to this day and I agree completely with Ann D’s beliefs on the subject
A big issue with crowd-sourcing of air data is routine calibrations. Eben Thoma of EPA/ORD and I discussed this a few years ago and concluded that a weekly “drive-by” close to a reference monitor would serve the purpose–perhaps using cell-towers and smartphones to do the job automatically.
Viral News Online
Sep 01, 2016 @ 08:05:23
The prize funds serve as seed money, so communities will need to partner with other parties, such as sensor manufacturers, data management companies and universities.
Jacky Tran
Sep 12, 2016 @ 06:28:09
Its nice fund which will help better life.
Thanks!
swethapriya
Sep 16, 2016 @ 06:02:43
The way you have stated everything above is quite awesome.
Keep blogging like this. Thanks a lot.
Joseph
Sep 26, 2016 @ 23:27:18
Great step forward in the right direction.
Waldemar
Oct 26, 2016 @ 16:06:52
What about graphene? I think someone should use it to make the best air sensors in the world.
Madhushalini
Nov 23, 2016 @ 22:31:45
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