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Impact of Circular, Waste-Heat Reuse Pathways on PM(2.5)-Air Quality, CO(2) Emissions, and Human Health in India: Comparison with Material Exchange Potential

[Image: see text] India is home to 1.3 billion people who are exposed to some of the highest levels of ambient air pollution in the world. In addition, India is one of the fastest-growing carbon-emitting countries. Here, we assess how two strategies to reuse waste-heat from coal-fired power plants a...

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Autores principales: Lal, Raj M., Tibrewal, Kushal, Venkataraman, Chandra, Tong, Kangkang, Fang, Andrew, Ma, Qiao, Wang, Shuxiao, Kaiser, Jennifer, Ramaswami, Anu, Russell, Armistead G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9261188/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35706337
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.1c05897
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author Lal, Raj M.
Tibrewal, Kushal
Venkataraman, Chandra
Tong, Kangkang
Fang, Andrew
Ma, Qiao
Wang, Shuxiao
Kaiser, Jennifer
Ramaswami, Anu
Russell, Armistead G.
author_facet Lal, Raj M.
Tibrewal, Kushal
Venkataraman, Chandra
Tong, Kangkang
Fang, Andrew
Ma, Qiao
Wang, Shuxiao
Kaiser, Jennifer
Ramaswami, Anu
Russell, Armistead G.
author_sort Lal, Raj M.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] India is home to 1.3 billion people who are exposed to some of the highest levels of ambient air pollution in the world. In addition, India is one of the fastest-growing carbon-emitting countries. Here, we assess how two strategies to reuse waste-heat from coal-fired power plants and other large sources would impact PM(2.5)-air quality, human health, and CO(2) emissions in 2015 and a future year, 2050, using varying levels of policy adoption (current regulations, proposed single-sector policies, and ambitious single-sector strategies). We find that power plant and industrial waste-heat reuse as input to district heating systems (DHSs), a novel, multisector strategy to reduce local biomass burning for heating emissions, can offset 71.3–85.2% of residential heating demand in communities near a power plant (9.3–12.4% of the nationwide heating demand) with the highest benefits observed during winter months in areas with collocated industrial activity and higher residential heating demands (e.g., New Delhi). Utilizing waste-heat to generate electricity via organic Rankine cycles (ORCs) can generate an additional 22 (11% of total coal-fired generating capacity), 41 (8%), 32 (13%), and 6 (5%) GW of electricity capacity in the 2015, 2050-current regulations, 2050-single-sector, and 2050-ambitious-single-sector scenarios, respectively. Emission estimates utilizing these strategies were input to the GEOS-Chem model, and population-weighted, simulated PM(2.5) showed small improvements in the DHS (0.2–0.4%) and ORC (0.3–3.4%) scenarios, where the minimal DHS PM(2.5)-benefit is attributed to the small contribution of biomass burning for heating to nationwide PM(2.5) emissions (much of the biomass burning activity is for cooking). The PM(2.5) reductions lead to ∼130–36,000 mortalities per year avoided among the scenarios, with the largest health benefits observed in the ORC scenarios. Nationwide CO(2) emissions reduced <0.04% by DHSs but showed larger reductions using ORCs (1.9–7.4%). Coal fly-ash as material exchange in cement and brick production was assessed, and capacity exists to completely reutilize unused fly-ash toward cement and brick production in each of the scenarios.
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spelling pubmed-92611882022-07-08 Impact of Circular, Waste-Heat Reuse Pathways on PM(2.5)-Air Quality, CO(2) Emissions, and Human Health in India: Comparison with Material Exchange Potential Lal, Raj M. Tibrewal, Kushal Venkataraman, Chandra Tong, Kangkang Fang, Andrew Ma, Qiao Wang, Shuxiao Kaiser, Jennifer Ramaswami, Anu Russell, Armistead G. Environ Sci Technol [Image: see text] India is home to 1.3 billion people who are exposed to some of the highest levels of ambient air pollution in the world. In addition, India is one of the fastest-growing carbon-emitting countries. Here, we assess how two strategies to reuse waste-heat from coal-fired power plants and other large sources would impact PM(2.5)-air quality, human health, and CO(2) emissions in 2015 and a future year, 2050, using varying levels of policy adoption (current regulations, proposed single-sector policies, and ambitious single-sector strategies). We find that power plant and industrial waste-heat reuse as input to district heating systems (DHSs), a novel, multisector strategy to reduce local biomass burning for heating emissions, can offset 71.3–85.2% of residential heating demand in communities near a power plant (9.3–12.4% of the nationwide heating demand) with the highest benefits observed during winter months in areas with collocated industrial activity and higher residential heating demands (e.g., New Delhi). Utilizing waste-heat to generate electricity via organic Rankine cycles (ORCs) can generate an additional 22 (11% of total coal-fired generating capacity), 41 (8%), 32 (13%), and 6 (5%) GW of electricity capacity in the 2015, 2050-current regulations, 2050-single-sector, and 2050-ambitious-single-sector scenarios, respectively. Emission estimates utilizing these strategies were input to the GEOS-Chem model, and population-weighted, simulated PM(2.5) showed small improvements in the DHS (0.2–0.4%) and ORC (0.3–3.4%) scenarios, where the minimal DHS PM(2.5)-benefit is attributed to the small contribution of biomass burning for heating to nationwide PM(2.5) emissions (much of the biomass burning activity is for cooking). The PM(2.5) reductions lead to ∼130–36,000 mortalities per year avoided among the scenarios, with the largest health benefits observed in the ORC scenarios. Nationwide CO(2) emissions reduced <0.04% by DHSs but showed larger reductions using ORCs (1.9–7.4%). Coal fly-ash as material exchange in cement and brick production was assessed, and capacity exists to completely reutilize unused fly-ash toward cement and brick production in each of the scenarios. American Chemical Society 2022-06-16 2022-07-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9261188/ /pubmed/35706337 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.1c05897 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Permits non-commercial access and re-use, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained; but does not permit creation of adaptations or other derivative works (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Lal, Raj M.
Tibrewal, Kushal
Venkataraman, Chandra
Tong, Kangkang
Fang, Andrew
Ma, Qiao
Wang, Shuxiao
Kaiser, Jennifer
Ramaswami, Anu
Russell, Armistead G.
Impact of Circular, Waste-Heat Reuse Pathways on PM(2.5)-Air Quality, CO(2) Emissions, and Human Health in India: Comparison with Material Exchange Potential
title Impact of Circular, Waste-Heat Reuse Pathways on PM(2.5)-Air Quality, CO(2) Emissions, and Human Health in India: Comparison with Material Exchange Potential
title_full Impact of Circular, Waste-Heat Reuse Pathways on PM(2.5)-Air Quality, CO(2) Emissions, and Human Health in India: Comparison with Material Exchange Potential
title_fullStr Impact of Circular, Waste-Heat Reuse Pathways on PM(2.5)-Air Quality, CO(2) Emissions, and Human Health in India: Comparison with Material Exchange Potential
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Circular, Waste-Heat Reuse Pathways on PM(2.5)-Air Quality, CO(2) Emissions, and Human Health in India: Comparison with Material Exchange Potential
title_short Impact of Circular, Waste-Heat Reuse Pathways on PM(2.5)-Air Quality, CO(2) Emissions, and Human Health in India: Comparison with Material Exchange Potential
title_sort impact of circular, waste-heat reuse pathways on pm(2.5)-air quality, co(2) emissions, and human health in india: comparison with material exchange potential
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9261188/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35706337
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.1c05897
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