污染物
发电站
环境科学
发电
化石燃料
电
煤
空气污染物标准
空气污染物
温室气体
空气污染
自然资源经济学
废物管理
环境工程
环境保护
工程类
功率(物理)
生态学
经济
电气工程
物理
生物
量子力学
作者
Dan Tong,Qiang Zhang,Steven J. Davis,Fei Liu,Bo Zheng,Guannan Geng,Tao Xue,Meng Li,Chaopeng Hong,Zifeng Lü,David G. Streets,Dabo Guan,Kebin He
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41893-017-0003-y
摘要
There are more than 30,000 biomass- and fossil-fuel-burning power plants now operating worldwide, reflecting a tremendously diverse infrastructure, which ranges in capacity from less than a megawatt to more than a gigawatt. In 2010, 68.7% of electricity generated globally came from these power plants, compared with 64.2% in 1990. Although the electricity generated by this infrastructure is vital to economic activity worldwide, it also produces more CO2 and air pollutant emissions than infrastructure from any other industrial sector. Here, we assess fuel- and region-specific opportunities for reducing undesirable air pollutant emissions using a newly developed emission dataset at the level of individual generating units. For example, we find that retiring or installing emission control technologies on units representing 0.8% of the global coal-fired power plant capacity could reduce levels of PM2.5 emissions by 7.7–14.2%. In India and China, retiring coal-fired plants representing 1.8% and 0.8% of total capacity can reduce total PM2.5 emissions from coal-fired plants by 13.2% and 16.0%, respectively. Our results therefore suggest that policies targeting a relatively small number of ‘super-polluting’ units could substantially reduce pollutant emissions and thus the related impacts on both human health and global climate. After developing a unit-based air pollutants emission inventory of more than 30,000 fossil fuel power plants operating worldwide in 2010, the authors find that retiring or implementing controlling measures on coal-fired power plants, representing 0.8% of global capacity, could reduce PM2.5 emissions from coal-fired plants by up to 14.2%.
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