环境卫生
环境科学
污染
空气污染
微粒
气候变化
化石燃料
环境保护
自然资源经济学
医学
工程类
经济
废物管理
海洋学
生态学
生物
地质学
作者
Hui Yang,Xinyuan Huang,Daniel M. Westervelt,Larry W. Horowitz,Wei Peng
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41893-022-00976-8
摘要
Exposure to ambient particulate matter (PM2.5) currently contributes to millions of global premature deaths every year. Here, we assess the pollution and health futures in five 2015–2100 scenarios using an integrated modelling framework. On the basis of a global Earth System Model (GFDL-ESM4.1), we find lower ambient PM2.5 concentrations, both globally and regionally, in future scenarios that are less fossil fuel-dependent and with more stringent pollution controls. Across the five scenarios, the global cumulative PM2.5-related deaths vary by a factor of two. However, the projected deaths are not necessarily lower in scenarios with less warming or cleaner air. This is because while reducing PM2.5 pollution lowers the exposure level, increasing the size of vulnerable populations can significantly increase PM2.5-related deaths. For most countries, we find that changes in socio-demographic factors (for example, ageing and declining baseline mortality rates) play a more important role than the exposure level in shaping future health burden.
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