UM
Residential Collegefalse
Status即將出版Forthcoming
Exploring the impacts of anthropogenic emission sectors on PM2.5 and human health in South and East Asia
Reddington, Carly L.1; Conibear, Luke1; Knote, Christoph2; Silver, Ben J.1; Li, Yong J.3; Chan, Chak K.4; Arnold, Steve R.1; Spracklen, Dominick V.1
2019-09-24
Source PublicationAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics
ISSN1680-7316
Volume19Issue:18Pages:11887-11910
Abstract

To improve poor air quality in Asia and inform effective emission-reduction strategies, it is vital to understand the contributions of different pollution sources and their associated human health burdens. In this study, we use the WRF-Chem regional atmospheric model to explore the air quality and human health benefits of eliminating emissions from six different anthropogenic sectors (transport, industry, shipping, electricity generation, residential combustion, and open biomass burning) over South and East Asia in 2014. We evaluate WRF-Chem against measurements from air quality monitoring stations across the region and find the model captures the spatial distribution and magnitude of PM (particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of no greater than 2.5 μm). We find that eliminating emissions from residential energy use, industry, or open biomass burning yields the largest reductions in population-weighted PM concentrations across the region. The largest human health benefit is achieved by eliminating either residential or industrial emissions, averting 467 000 (95% uncertainty interval (95UI): 409 000-542 000) or 283 000 (95UI: 226 000- 358 000) annual premature mortalities, respectively, in India, China, and South-east Asia, with fire prevention averting 28 000 (95UI: 24 000-32 000) annual premature mortalities across the region. We compare our results to previous sector-specific emission studies. Across these studies, residential emissions are the dominant cause of particulate pollution in India, with a multi-model mean contribution of 42% to population-weighted annual mean PM. Residential and industrial emissions cause the dominant contributions in China, with multi-model mean contributions of 29% for both sectors to population-weighted annual mean PM. Future work should focus on identifying the most effective options within the residential, industrial, and open biomassburning emission sectors to improve air quality across South and East Asia.

DOI10.5194/acp-19-11887-2019
URLView the original
Language英語English
WOS IDWOS:000487995000006
Scopus ID2-s2.0-85072643922
Fulltext Access
Citation statistics
Document TypeJournal article
CollectionUniversity of Macau
Affiliation1.Institute for Climate and Atmospheric Science, School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom
2.Meteorological Institute, LMU Munich, Munich, Germany
3.Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Science and Technology, University of Macau, Taipa, Macao
4.School of Energy and Environment, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Reddington, Carly L.,Conibear, Luke,Knote, Christoph,et al. Exploring the impacts of anthropogenic emission sectors on PM2.5 and human health in South and East Asia[J]. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 2019, 19(18), 11887-11910.
APA Reddington, Carly L.., Conibear, Luke., Knote, Christoph., Silver, Ben J.., Li, Yong J.., Chan, Chak K.., Arnold, Steve R.., & Spracklen, Dominick V. (2019). Exploring the impacts of anthropogenic emission sectors on PM2.5 and human health in South and East Asia. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 19(18), 11887-11910.
MLA Reddington, Carly L.,et al."Exploring the impacts of anthropogenic emission sectors on PM2.5 and human health in South and East Asia".Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 19.18(2019):11887-11910.
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Related Services
Recommend this item
Bookmark
Usage statistics
Export to Endnote
Google Scholar
Similar articles in Google Scholar
[Reddington, Carly L.]'s Articles
[Conibear, Luke]'s Articles
[Knote, Christoph]'s Articles
Baidu academic
Similar articles in Baidu academic
[Reddington, Carly L.]'s Articles
[Conibear, Luke]'s Articles
[Knote, Christoph]'s Articles
Bing Scholar
Similar articles in Bing Scholar
[Reddington, Carly L.]'s Articles
[Conibear, Luke]'s Articles
[Knote, Christoph]'s Articles
Terms of Use
No data!
Social Bookmark/Share
All comments (0)
No comment.
 

Items in the repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.