Levy Jonathan I, Baxter Lisa K, Schwartz Joel
Harvard School of Public Health, USA.
Risk Anal. 2009 Jul;29(7):1000-14. doi: 10.1111/j.1539-6924.2009.01227.x. Epub 2009 Apr 9.
The health-related damages associated with emissions from coal-fired power plants can vary greatly across facilities as a function of plant, site, and population characteristics, but the degree of variability and the contributing factors have not been formally evaluated. In this study, we modeled the monetized damages associated with 407 coal-fired power plants in the United States, focusing on premature mortality from fine particulate matter (PM(2.5)). We applied a reduced-form chemistry-transport model accounting for primary PM(2.5) emissions and the influence of sulfur dioxide (SO(2)) and nitrogen oxide (NO(x)) emissions on secondary particulate formation. Outputs were linked with a concentration-response function for PM(2.5)-related mortality that incorporated nonlinearities and model uncertainty. We valued mortality with a value of statistical life approach, characterizing and propagating uncertainties in all model elements. At the median of the plant-specific uncertainty distributions, damages across plants ranged from $30,000 to $500,000 per ton of PM(2.5), $6,000 to $50,000 per ton of SO(2), $500 to $15,000 per ton of NO(x), and $0.02 to $1.57 per kilowatt-hour of electricity generated. Variability in damages per ton of emissions was almost entirely explained by population exposure per unit emissions (intake fraction), which itself was related to atmospheric conditions and the population size at various distances from the power plant. Variability in damages per kilowatt-hour was highly correlated with SO(2) emissions, related to fuel and control technology characteristics, but was also correlated with atmospheric conditions and population size at various distances. Our findings emphasize that control strategies that consider variability in damages across facilities would yield more efficient outcomes.
与燃煤电厂排放相关的健康损害会因电厂、厂址和人口特征的不同而在各设施间有很大差异,但这种差异程度和影响因素尚未得到正式评估。在本研究中,我们对美国407座燃煤电厂相关的货币化损害进行了建模,重点关注细颗粒物(PM(2.5))导致的过早死亡。我们应用了一个简化形式的化学传输模型,该模型考虑了一次PM(2.5)排放以及二氧化硫(SO(2))和氮氧化物(NO(x))排放对二次颗粒物形成的影响。模型输出与一个针对PM(2.5)相关死亡率的浓度响应函数相关联,该函数纳入了非线性和模型不确定性。我们采用统计生命价值法对死亡率进行估值,刻画并传播所有模型要素中的不确定性。在各电厂特定不确定性分布的中位数处,每吨PM(2.5)的损害范围为30,000美元至500,000美元,每吨SO(2)为6,000美元至50,000美元,每吨NO(x)为500美元至15,000美元,每千瓦时发电量为0.02美元至1.57美元。每吨排放损害的变异性几乎完全由单位排放的人口暴露量(摄入分数)解释,而摄入分数本身又与大气条件以及距电厂不同距离处的人口规模有关。每千瓦时损害的变异性与SO(2)排放高度相关,这与燃料和控制技术特征有关,但也与大气条件和不同距离处的人口规模相关。我们的研究结果强调,考虑各设施间损害变异性的控制策略将产生更有效的结果。