Peter Brimblecombe (born 1949)[1] is an Australian-born, British
atmospheric chemist, currently emeritus professor of atmospheric chemistry at the
University of East Anglia and
National Sun Yat-sen University in Taiwan.[2][3][4] In a five-decade research career, he has written or co-authored seven books and around 350 peer-reviewed papers on
air pollution and its effects on human health and the environment,[5] but is probably best known as the author of The Big Smoke, which has been described as a definitive history of air pollution.[6][7][8]
Education and career
Brimblecombe was born in Canberra, Australia and educated at the
University of Auckland, New Zealand, where he earned a BSc (1970), MSc (1971), and PhD in chemistry (1973).[4] His thesis, studying the aqueous chemistry of environmental
sulfur dioxide, was supervised by David John Spedding.[9] Following his doctorate, he worked in Fiji for a year, lecturing in inorganic chemistry at the School of Natural Resources of the
University of the South Pacific.[10] In 1974, he relocated to Britain to become first a lecturer then a professor in atmospheric chemistry at the University of East Anglia (UEA), where he also served as associate dean from 2008 to 2011.[4] Following his retirement, after four decades at UEA, he moved to Hong Kong and shifted the focus of his research to study air pollution in Asia.[10] From 2013 to 2018, he was chair professor of environmental chemistry at the School of Energy and Environment,
City University of Hong Kong, then became Distinguished Research Chair Professor at National Sun Yat-sen University in Taiwan.[4] He is currently emeritus professor of atmospheric chemistry at the University of East Anglia and at National Sun Yat-sen University.[4]
Research interests
Brimblecombe's wide-ranging research has covered many different aspects of atmospheric chemistry and air pollution, but also makes connections to broader history, art, and culture.[11] As he put it in a 2009 lecture: "Environmental pollution is not merely a matter of environmental chemistry. The smells have to be smelt. Painting and poetry can be as informative as a scientific description when trying to understand the complexities of environmental problems".[11]
His 1987 book The Big Smoke: A History of Air Pollution in London since Medieval Times is highly cited[12] and often described as a "definitive", "classic" history of air pollution,[6][7][13] although historians' views of the book were mixed.[14][15][16]
He has published numerous papers on the effects of air pollution on historic buildings and monuments,[17][18][19] and both historical artifacts and everyday objects.[20] In 2004, he was one of a group of experts from 10 countries involved in a three-year "Noah's Ark" project designed "to investigate the effects of
climate change and pollution on Europe's historic built environment over the next 100 years".[21][22][23] He has provided scientific advice on heritage and conservation to the Council of Europe, the European Parliament and the House of Lords.[11]
In the late 1990s, while working at UEA, Brimblecombe advised the
National Trust on strategies to minimize the impact of dust on its historic collections,[24] which led the organization to "ban" dusting for a three years and prompted considerable news comment.[25][26][27]Giles Whittell, writing in The Times, noted that Brimblecombe, "who may know more about dust than anyone in the world, has advised historic houses to guide their visitors along routes with as few sharp turns as possible and to position their most precious artefacts at the end of the tour, by which time fatigue has set in and people fidget less".[28] In the same paper,
Simon Jenkins described Brimblecombe as "the nation's mite-buster king-at-arms, who strikes terror in the sternest housekeeper" and expressed mixed views about the plan.[29]
Brimblecombe's recent research includes studies of how
microplastics are carried through the environment,[10] how
COVID-19 affected air pollution,[30] and how pollution is depicted in the work of artists and writers such as
Monet and
Dickens.[20][31][32]
He is a frequent media commentator on issues related to pollution and the environment, including such topics as the ozone layer,[37] climate change,[38][39] air pollution in China,[40][41] atmospheric acidity and
acid rain,[33][42] and the 1952
Great Smog of London.[43][44][45]
Clegg, Simon L.; Brimblecombe, Peter; Wexler, Anthony S. (26 February 1998). "Thermodynamic Model of the System H+−NH4+−SO42−−NO3−−H2O at Tropospheric Temperatures". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 102 (12): 2137–2154.
Bibcode:
1998JPCA..102.2137C.
doi:
10.1021/jp973042r.
eISSN1520-5215.
ISSN1089-5639.
^
abLean, Geoffrey (6 December 2012).
"The Great Smog of London". The Telegraph. Retrieved 2 June 2023. ... as Prof Peter Brimblecombe in his classic book The Big Smoke, records...
^Hamlin, Christopher (1988). "Review of The Big Smoke: A History of Air Pollution in London since Medieval Times, by P. Brimblecombe". Albion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies. 20 (4): 654-655.
doi:
10.2307/4050228.
JSTOR4050228.
^Luckin, Bill (1991). "Review of The Big Smoke: A History of Air Pollution in London Since Medieval Times., by P. Brimblecombe". The Economic History Review. 44 (4): 722–23.
doi:
10.2307/2597810.
JSTOR2597810.