School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; Department of Economics, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Energy, Environmental, Chemical Engineering, Washington University in St Louis, St Louis, MO, USA.
Lancet Planet Health. 2024 Jul;8(7):e476-e488. doi: 10.1016/S2542-5196(24)00098-6.
Climate actions targeting combustion sources can generate large ancillary health benefits via associated air-quality improvements. Therefore, understanding the health costs associated with ambient fine particulate matter (PM) from combustion sources can guide policy design for both air pollution and climate mitigation efforts.
In this modelling study, we estimated the health costs attributable to ambient PM from six major combustion sources across 204 countries using updated concentration-response models and an age-adjusted valuation method. We defined major combustion sources as the sum of total coal, liquid fuel and natural gas, solid biofuel, agricultural waste burning, other fires, and 50% of the anthropogenic fugitive, combustion, and industrial dust source.
Global long-term exposure to ambient PM from combustion sources imposed US$1·1 (95% uncertainty interval 0·8-1·5) trillion in health costs in 2019, accounting for 56% of the total health costs from all PM sources. Comparing source contributions to PM concentrations and health costs, we observed a higher share of health costs from combustion sources compared to their contribution to population-weighted PM concentration across 134 countries, accounting for more than 87% of the global population. This disparity was primarily attributed to the non-linear relationship between PM concentration and its associated health costs. Globally, phasing out fossil fuels can generate 23% higher relative health benefits compared to their share of PM reductions. Specifically, the share of health costs for total coal was 36% higher than the source's contributions to corresponding PM concentrations and the share of health costs for liquid fuel and natural gas was 12% higher. Other than fossil fuels, South Asia was expected to show 16% greater relative health benefits than the percentage reduction in PM from the abatement of solid biofuel emissions.
In most countries, targeting combustion sources might offer greater health benefits than non-combustion sources. This finding provides additional rationale for climate actions aimed at phasing out combustion sources, especially those related to fossil fuels and solid biofuel. Mitigation efforts designed according to source-specific health costs can more effectively avoid health costs than strategies that depend solely on the source contributions to overall PM concentration.
The Health Effects Institute, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and NASA.
针对燃烧源的气候行动可以通过相关空气质量改善带来巨大的附带健康益处。因此,了解与燃烧源产生的环境细颗粒物(PM)相关的健康成本,可以为空气污染和气候缓解措施的政策制定提供指导。
在这项建模研究中,我们使用更新的浓度-反应模型和年龄调整估值方法,估算了来自 204 个国家的 6 种主要燃烧源产生的环境 PM 相关的健康成本。我们将主要燃烧源定义为煤炭、液体燃料和天然气总和、固体生物质燃料、农业废弃物燃烧、其他火灾和人为 fugitive、燃烧和工业粉尘源的 50%。
2019 年,全球长期暴露于燃烧源产生的环境 PM 导致健康成本为 1.1 万亿美元(95%置信区间为 0.8-1.5 万亿美元),占所有 PM 来源健康成本的 56%。比较来源对 PM 浓度和健康成本的贡献,我们观察到与燃烧源对人口加权 PM 浓度的贡献相比,燃烧源对健康成本的贡献更高,占全球 134 个国家超过 87%的人口。这种差异主要归因于 PM 浓度与其相关健康成本之间的非线性关系。在全球范围内,淘汰化石燃料可以产生比其对 PM 减排的贡献高 23%的相对健康效益。具体而言,煤炭总排放量产生的健康成本份额比其对相应 PM 浓度的贡献高出 36%,液体燃料和天然气的健康成本份额比其高出 12%。除了化石燃料外,南亚预计比减少固体生物质燃料排放所带来的 PM 减少百分比表现出 16%更大的相对健康效益。
在大多数国家,针对燃烧源的措施可能比非燃烧源带来更大的健康益处。这一发现为旨在淘汰燃烧源的气候行动提供了更多的依据,特别是与化石燃料和固体生物质燃料相关的行动。根据特定来源的健康成本制定的缓解措施比仅依赖于总体 PM 浓度的来源贡献的策略更有效地避免健康成本。
健康影响研究所、国家自然科学基金委员会和美国宇航局。