Thanks! Yeah you can build a CO2 outdoor sensor with our instructions on GitHub and hopefully soon you will be able to just purchase a kit if you’d like.
As for your question about why does this not exist, there isn’t exactly one reason, but all of the reasons you stated above are certainly a part of the story.
The US government has not deployed a network like this primarily due to cost. Monitoring stations that the EPA install typically have a cost of at minimum $100k to install and finding people to maintain it is even harder.
Citizen science networks are generally started and deployed by for-profit companies. Because it’s hard to draw a direct line between a high CO2 measurement and some sort of immediate effect, most for-profit companies can’t justify the cost to build and sell something like this. For instance, purple—air is a for profit based on pollution particles. Consumers latch onto this because it has direct health effects and benefits you as the purchaser to know if you should open the windows or not today. Same with weather monitoring stations. There is a direct benefit for you in planning your day to know what the hyper local temperature outside is.
It’s a real shame and a place where capitalism fails society in my opinion. Having more data on the issue is important to inform gov. policy, hold emission sources accountable etc.
I also don’t want to trivialize the difficulty in the data analysis for the very low cost co2 sensors. The accuracy and precision of non-calibrated cheap ( <$100 ) is very poor. It’s still a bit of an unsolved problem to figure out how to best use this data. The theory is that a dense network of low cost and a few high grade sensors can be used to produce meaningful datasets. However it’s still risky and lots of research and testing is needed to validate this. The amount of money required is a bit outside the scope of what most academic labs can support on their own. And it’s way too risky to raise investments as a for-profit.
However I do think it’s worth doing, hence why the org. is a non-profit.
As for your question about why does this not exist, there isn’t exactly one reason, but all of the reasons you stated above are certainly a part of the story.
The US government has not deployed a network like this primarily due to cost. Monitoring stations that the EPA install typically have a cost of at minimum $100k to install and finding people to maintain it is even harder.
Citizen science networks are generally started and deployed by for-profit companies. Because it’s hard to draw a direct line between a high CO2 measurement and some sort of immediate effect, most for-profit companies can’t justify the cost to build and sell something like this. For instance, purple—air is a for profit based on pollution particles. Consumers latch onto this because it has direct health effects and benefits you as the purchaser to know if you should open the windows or not today. Same with weather monitoring stations. There is a direct benefit for you in planning your day to know what the hyper local temperature outside is.
It’s a real shame and a place where capitalism fails society in my opinion. Having more data on the issue is important to inform gov. policy, hold emission sources accountable etc.