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Source influence on emission pathways and ambient PM(2.5) pollution over India (2015–2050)

India is currently experiencing degraded air quality, and future economic development will lead to challenges for air quality management. Scenarios of sectoral emissions of fine particulate matter and its precursors were developed and evaluated for 2015–2050, under specific pathways of diffusion of...

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Autores principales: Venkataraman, Chandra, Brauer, Michael, Tibrewal, Kushal, Sadavarte, Pankaj, Ma, Qiao, Cohen, Aaron, Chaliyakunnel, Sreelekha, Frostad, Joseph, Klimont, Zbigniew, Martin, Randall V., Millet, Dylan B., Philip, Sajeev, Walker, Katherine, Wang, Shuxiao
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7935015/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33679902
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-18-8017-2018
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author Venkataraman, Chandra
Brauer, Michael
Tibrewal, Kushal
Sadavarte, Pankaj
Ma, Qiao
Cohen, Aaron
Chaliyakunnel, Sreelekha
Frostad, Joseph
Klimont, Zbigniew
Martin, Randall V.
Millet, Dylan B.
Philip, Sajeev
Walker, Katherine
Wang, Shuxiao
author_facet Venkataraman, Chandra
Brauer, Michael
Tibrewal, Kushal
Sadavarte, Pankaj
Ma, Qiao
Cohen, Aaron
Chaliyakunnel, Sreelekha
Frostad, Joseph
Klimont, Zbigniew
Martin, Randall V.
Millet, Dylan B.
Philip, Sajeev
Walker, Katherine
Wang, Shuxiao
author_sort Venkataraman, Chandra
collection PubMed
description India is currently experiencing degraded air quality, and future economic development will lead to challenges for air quality management. Scenarios of sectoral emissions of fine particulate matter and its precursors were developed and evaluated for 2015–2050, under specific pathways of diffusion of cleaner and more energy-efficient technologies. The impacts of individual source sectors on PM(2.5) concentrations were assessed through systematic simulations of spatially and temporally resolved particulate matter concentrations, using the GEOS-Chem model, followed by population-weighted aggregation to national and state levels. We find that PM(2.5) pollution is a pan-India problem, with a regional character, and is not limited to urban areas or megacities. Under present-day emissions, levels in most states exceeded the national PM(2.5) annual standard (40 μg m(−3)). Sources related to human activities were responsible for the largest proportion of the present-day population exposure to PM(2.5) in India. About 60 % of India’s mean population-weighted PM(2.5) concentrations come from anthropogenic source sectors, while the remainder are from “other” sources, windblown dust and extra-regional sources. Leading contributors are residential biomass combustion, power plant and industrial coal combustion and anthropogenic dust (including coal fly ash, fugitive road dust and waste burning). Transportation, brick production and distributed diesel were other contributors to PM(2.5). Future evolution of emissions under regulations set at current levels and promulgated levels caused further deterioration of air quality in 2030 and 2050. Under an ambitious prospective policy scenario, promoting very large shifts away from traditional biomass technologies and coal-based electricity generation, significant reductions in PM(2.5) levels are achievable in 2030 and 2050. Effective mitigation of future air pollution in India requires adoption of aggressive prospective regulation, currently not formulated, for a three-pronged switch away from (i) biomass-fuelled traditional technologies, (ii) industrial coal-burning and (iii) open burning of agricultural residue. Future air pollution is dominated by industrial process emissions, reflecting larger expansion in industrial, rather than residential energy demand. However, even under the most active reductions envisioned, the 2050 mean exposure, excluding any impact from windblown mineral dust, is estimated to be nearly 3 times higher than the WHO Air Quality Guideline.
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spelling pubmed-79350152021-03-05 Source influence on emission pathways and ambient PM(2.5) pollution over India (2015–2050) Venkataraman, Chandra Brauer, Michael Tibrewal, Kushal Sadavarte, Pankaj Ma, Qiao Cohen, Aaron Chaliyakunnel, Sreelekha Frostad, Joseph Klimont, Zbigniew Martin, Randall V. Millet, Dylan B. Philip, Sajeev Walker, Katherine Wang, Shuxiao Atmos Chem Phys Article India is currently experiencing degraded air quality, and future economic development will lead to challenges for air quality management. Scenarios of sectoral emissions of fine particulate matter and its precursors were developed and evaluated for 2015–2050, under specific pathways of diffusion of cleaner and more energy-efficient technologies. The impacts of individual source sectors on PM(2.5) concentrations were assessed through systematic simulations of spatially and temporally resolved particulate matter concentrations, using the GEOS-Chem model, followed by population-weighted aggregation to national and state levels. We find that PM(2.5) pollution is a pan-India problem, with a regional character, and is not limited to urban areas or megacities. Under present-day emissions, levels in most states exceeded the national PM(2.5) annual standard (40 μg m(−3)). Sources related to human activities were responsible for the largest proportion of the present-day population exposure to PM(2.5) in India. About 60 % of India’s mean population-weighted PM(2.5) concentrations come from anthropogenic source sectors, while the remainder are from “other” sources, windblown dust and extra-regional sources. Leading contributors are residential biomass combustion, power plant and industrial coal combustion and anthropogenic dust (including coal fly ash, fugitive road dust and waste burning). Transportation, brick production and distributed diesel were other contributors to PM(2.5). Future evolution of emissions under regulations set at current levels and promulgated levels caused further deterioration of air quality in 2030 and 2050. Under an ambitious prospective policy scenario, promoting very large shifts away from traditional biomass technologies and coal-based electricity generation, significant reductions in PM(2.5) levels are achievable in 2030 and 2050. Effective mitigation of future air pollution in India requires adoption of aggressive prospective regulation, currently not formulated, for a three-pronged switch away from (i) biomass-fuelled traditional technologies, (ii) industrial coal-burning and (iii) open burning of agricultural residue. Future air pollution is dominated by industrial process emissions, reflecting larger expansion in industrial, rather than residential energy demand. However, even under the most active reductions envisioned, the 2050 mean exposure, excluding any impact from windblown mineral dust, is estimated to be nearly 3 times higher than the WHO Air Quality Guideline. 2018-06-07 2018-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7935015/ /pubmed/33679902 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-18-8017-2018 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
spellingShingle Article
Venkataraman, Chandra
Brauer, Michael
Tibrewal, Kushal
Sadavarte, Pankaj
Ma, Qiao
Cohen, Aaron
Chaliyakunnel, Sreelekha
Frostad, Joseph
Klimont, Zbigniew
Martin, Randall V.
Millet, Dylan B.
Philip, Sajeev
Walker, Katherine
Wang, Shuxiao
Source influence on emission pathways and ambient PM(2.5) pollution over India (2015–2050)
title Source influence on emission pathways and ambient PM(2.5) pollution over India (2015–2050)
title_full Source influence on emission pathways and ambient PM(2.5) pollution over India (2015–2050)
title_fullStr Source influence on emission pathways and ambient PM(2.5) pollution over India (2015–2050)
title_full_unstemmed Source influence on emission pathways and ambient PM(2.5) pollution over India (2015–2050)
title_short Source influence on emission pathways and ambient PM(2.5) pollution over India (2015–2050)
title_sort source influence on emission pathways and ambient pm(2.5) pollution over india (2015–2050)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7935015/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33679902
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-18-8017-2018
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