A data-driven approach to the forecasting of ground-level ozone concentration
This work addresses air pollution forecasting for public health decision-makers, but it is incremental as it applies existing methods to a specific regional context.
The study tackled forecasting day-ahead maximum ozone concentrations in southern Switzerland using machine learning, achieving increased accuracy for specific ozone peak ranges through weighted observations.
The ability to forecast the concentration of air pollutants in an urban region is crucial for decision-makers wishing to reduce the impact of pollution on public health through active measures (e.g. temporary traffic closures). In this study, we present a machine learning approach applied to the forecast of the day-ahead maximum value of the ozone concentration for several geographical locations in southern Switzerland. Due to the low density of measurement stations and to the complex orography of the use case terrain, we adopted feature selection methods instead of explicitly restricting relevant features to a neighbourhood of the prediction sites, as common in spatio-temporal forecasting methods. We then used Shapley values to assess the explainability of the learned models in terms of feature importance and feature interactions in relation to ozone predictions; our analysis suggests that the trained models effectively learned explanatory cross-dependencies among atmospheric variables. Finally, we show how weighting observations helps in increasing the accuracy of the forecasts for specific ranges of ozone's daily peak values.