Air quality in Africa from the telecoupled perspective

exploring interdisciplinary and transboundary scientific collaboration between Africa and the Global North

Review (2025)
Author(s)

Marleen Dekker (Universiteit Leiden)

Agnieszka H. Kazimierczuk (Universiteit Leiden)

Rebecca M. Garland (University of Pretoria)

Deborah Stein Zweers (Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI))

PF Felicitas Levelt (TU Delft - Atmospheric Remote Sensing, Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI), National Center for Atmospheric Research)

Research Group
Atmospheric Remote Sensing
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1017/sus.2025.10019
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Research Group
Atmospheric Remote Sensing
Issue number
e34
Volume number
8
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Abstract

Non-Technical Summary
This article explores air pollution as a globally connected issue using the telecoupling lens, which links distant regions through environmental and human systems. It shows how pollution connects Africa and the Global North, demonstrating that actions in one place affect people and air quality elsewhere. Drawing on 90 research sources, it looks at how satellite data helps monitor air quality and finds that most studies focus on natural sciences, with limited input from social sciences and less frequently from African researchers. The authors highlight the need to close data gaps and call for more inclusive, cross-disciplinary, and international cooperation in air quality research. Overall, the study pushes for fairer, more connected approaches to understanding and tackling air pollution worldwide.

Technical Summary
Air quality (AQ) is a transboundary phenomenon resulting from globalized interactions between coupled human and natural systems. Drawing on the telecoupling framework, this article argues that pollution flows, socioeconomic systems, and policy responses interconnect Africa with the Global North and identifies important data gaps for better understanding these interconnections. Through a meta-synthesis of 90 academic and gray literature sources, we analyze the use of satellite data for air quality monitoring, with a particular focus on interdisciplinary collaboration and African scientific participation. Our findings highlight a strong reliance on natural science approaches, limited integration of social science perspectives, and ongoing marginalization of African voices in shaping research agendas. We argue for a transformative research agenda rooted in interdisciplinary integration, inter-regional collaboration, and data justice. By adopting a telecoupled lens and prioritizing inclusive development, this study provides new pathways to understand, measure, and address air pollution as a global issue with deeply local consequences.

Social Media Summary
Air pollution links Africa & the Global North–study urges data justice & inclusive, global cooperation.