Case Study | Environment
The City of Ettlingen, together with Stadtwerke Ettlingen and Palas GmbH from Karlsruhe, have started a pilot project to measure the current air quality values in the city at various locations.

Making the invisible visible - under this motto, the city of Ettlingen, together with Stadtwerke Ettlingen and Palas® from Karlsruhe, has started a pilot project to measure the current air quality values in the city at various locations and make the collected data available on the municipal homepage.

Five fine dust measuring devices have recently been installed at the city train station, at the gas station at Seehof, on the tower of Ettlingen's city hall, and on the roof of Ettlingen's public utility company. More are to follow in the city area and individual districts. The aim is to record the air quality at various locations to understand possible health risks better. With this project, the city of Ettlingen is taking an essential step toward creating and maintaining a healthy and sustainable living environment. The collected particulate matter data is made available to the citizens on the website of the city of Ettlingen. Thus, all citizens of Ettlingen can inform themselves about the air quality reliably and, if necessary, adjust their daily routine accordingly. They can be accessed at the following link: https://www.ettlingen.de/umweltsensoren.

Responsible for the project of the city of Ettlingen is the head of the main office and digitalization officer Andreas Kraut with his interdepartmental project team. Stadtwerke Ettlingen GmbH, the city's infrastructure service provider with Florian Kraft, took over installing the fine dust measuring devices from the AQ Guard Smart series. The latest member of the Palas® product family is a compact, cloud-enabled, and MCERTS-certified measuring device for determining air quality. In addition to the usual PM2.5 and PM10 particulate matter values, the device also displays temperature, humidity, pressure, and the pollutant gases SO2, NO2, CO, and O3 at sensitive, high-traffic locations.

In addition, Palas® is testing the integration of the environmental sensors into the city's existing, area-wide LoRaWAN network (Long Range Wide Area Network) because municipalities, in particular, increasingly use this transmission technology.

Easy implementation and integration for municipalities, precise and up-to-date measurement data for all

All devices installed in Ettlingen transmit data directly to Palas® cloud-based environmental measurement system, "MyAtmosphere." In the future, the city of Ettlingen will receive the data via this system without detours and up-to-date on its website.

Optical particle analysis is also used for the official nationwide fine dust measurement. This technology immediately determines the particulate matter values without post-evaluation and correction, regardless of weather conditions or time of day.

The city of Ettlingen is thus consistently pursuing its path toward further digitization and transparency toward its citizens - another building block in its digitization strategy.

Mayor Johannes Arnold says: "We are pleased that we were able to install these devices in Ettlingen with the company Palas and we are excited about the long-term evaluations." Andreas Kraut adds, "It is exciting to observe how the air quality changes over the day - depending on the traffic situation, time of year, weather situation, temperature, etc."

Air pollution - underestimated risk

"With our technology, the city of Ettlingen can give its population more transparency and more safety. Air pollution is unfortunately not taken seriously enough, yet it has a great impact on us and our environment," summarizes Henrik Hof, product manager of Palas GmbH.

Air pollution is the most significant environmental health risk in Europe. Every year, more than seven million people die due to air pollution, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). 96% of the urban population was exposed to particulate matter concentrations above the new WHO guideline value of 5 µg/m³ (PM2.5) in 2021.

The European Commission has set a 2030 target to reduce premature deaths from particulate matter by at least 55% compared to 2005. To this end, the EU's air quality directives are being revised and adapted to the WHO recommendations.

The Palas® solution - precision is what counts

Reliable measurement accuracy is, therefore, even more, crucial than before to take appropriate measures to protect people and the environment. Palas® measuring instruments offer the necessary precision and reliability here. Using state-of-the-art optical measurement technology that measures optical light scattering from individual particles, Palas® measuring instruments count every particle in the air. This guarantees precise measurement results and reliable data even at very low particle concentrations.

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