Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.
co-principal investigator.
Res Rep Health Eff Inst. 2021 Dec;2021(210):1-45.
Ambient fine particulate matter (particles <2.5 μm in aerodynamic diameter [PM]) is the world's leading environmental health risk factor. Reducing the PM disease burden requires specific strategies that target dominant sources across multiple spatial scales. The Global Burden of Disease from Major Air Pollution Sources (GBD MAPS) project provides a contemporary and comprehensive evaluation of contributions to the ambient PM disease burden from source sectors and fuels across 21 regions, 204 countries, and 200 subnational areas. We first derived quantitative contributions from 24 emission sensitivity simulations using an updated global atmospheric chemistry-transport model, input with a newly developed detailed anthropogenic emissions dataset that includes emissions specific to source sector and fuels. These simulation results were integrated with newly available high-resolution satellite-derived PM exposure estimates and disease-specific concentration-response relationships consistent with the GBD project to quantify contributions of specific source sector and fuel to the ambient PM disease burden across all regions, countries, and subnational areas. To improve the transparency and reproducibility of this and future work, we publicly provided the global atmospheric chemistry-transport model source code, emissions dataset and emissions model source code, analysis scripts, and source sensitivity results, and further described the emissions dataset and source contribution results in two publications. We found that nearly 1.05 million (95% uncertainty interval [UI]: 0.74-1.36 million) deaths worldwide (27.3% of the total mortality attributable to PM) would be avoidable by eliminating fossil fuel combustion, with coal contributing over half of that burden. Residential (19.2%; 736,000 deaths [95% UI: 521,000-955,000]), industrial (11.7%; 448,000 deaths [95% UI: 318,000-582,000]), and energy (10.2%; 391,000 deaths [95% UI: 277,000-507,000]) sector emissions are among the dominant global sources Uncertainty in these estimates reflects those of the input datasets. Regions with the largest anthropogenic contributions generally have the highest numbers of attributable deaths, which clearly demonstrates the importance of reducing these emissions to realize reductions in global air pollution and its disease burden.
环境细颗粒物(空气动力学直径小于 2.5μm 的颗粒 [PM])是全球主要的环境健康风险因素。降低 PM 疾病负担需要针对多个空间尺度上主要来源的具体策略。主要空气污染物来源造成的全球疾病负担(GBD MAPS)项目提供了对 21 个地区、204 个国家和 200 个次国家地区环境 PM 疾病负担来自源部门和燃料的贡献的当代和全面评估。我们首先使用经过更新的全球大气化学传输模型从 24 个排放敏感性模拟中得出定量贡献,该模型的输入是一个新开发的详细人为排放数据集,其中包括针对源部门和燃料的特定排放。这些模拟结果与新获得的高分辨率卫星衍生的 PM 暴露估计以及与 GBD 项目一致的特定疾病的浓度反应关系进行了整合,以量化特定源部门和燃料对所有地区、国家和次国家地区环境 PM 疾病负担的贡献。为了提高这项工作和未来工作的透明度和可重复性,我们公开提供了全球大气化学传输模型源代码、排放数据集和排放模型源代码、分析脚本以及源敏感性结果,并在两篇出版物中进一步描述了排放数据集和源贡献结果。我们发现,通过消除化石燃料燃烧,全球范围内将有近 105 万人(95%不确定性区间 [UI]:0.74-1.36 万人)死亡(占 PM 归因死亡率的 27.3%),其中煤炭贡献了一半以上的负担。住宅(19.2%;736,000 人死亡[95% UI:521,000-955,000])、工业(11.7%;448,000 人死亡[95% UI:318,000-582,000])和能源(10.2%;391,000 人死亡[95% UI:277,000-507,000])部门的排放是全球主要来源之一。这些估计的不确定性反映了输入数据集的不确定性。人为排放贡献最大的地区通常归因死亡人数最多,这清楚地表明减少这些排放对于实现全球空气污染及其疾病负担的减少非常重要。