News Release

Household fuels exceed power plants and cars as source of smog in Beijing

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Princeton University, Engineering School

Smog in Beijing

image: Researchers found that emissions from residential cooking and heating fires contributes more to smog in the Beijing region than do the transportation sector and power plants combined. view more 

Credit: Photo Illustration by Gwyneth Olson

Beijing and surrounding areas of China often suffer from choking smog. The Chinese government has made commitments to improving air quality and has achieved notable results in reducing emissions from the power and transportation sectors. However, new research indicates that the government could achieve dramatic air quality improvements with more attention on an overlooked source of outdoor pollution -- residential cooking and heating.

"Coal and other dirty solid fuels are frequently used in homes for cooking and heating," said Denise Mauzerall, a professor of civil and environmental engineering and public and international affairs at Princeton University. "Because these emissions are essentially uncontrolled they emit a disproportionately large amount of air pollutants which contribute substantially to smog in Beijing and surrounding regions."

Households account for about 18 percent of total energy use in the Beijing region but produce 50 percent of black carbon emissions and 69 percent of organic carbon emissions, according to a research team from institutions including Princeton, the University of California Berkeley, Peking University and Tsinghua University. In the Beijing area, households contribute more pollutants in the form of small soot particles (which are particularly hazardous to human health) than the transportation sector and power plants combined; in the winter heating season, households also contribute more small particles than do industrial sources.

The researchers said the high levels of air pollutant emissions are due to the use of coal and other dirty fuels in small stoves and heaters that lack the pollution controls in place in power plants, vehicles and at some factories.

The "use of solid fuels (coal and biomass) for heating and cooking in households contributes directly to exposures in and around residences and is a major source of ill health in China," the researchers wrote in an article published online on June 27, 2016 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The researchers said illness caused by air pollution was a leading cause of premature death in China ranking between high blood pressure and smoking as risk factors.

The researchers used a sophisticated air pollution model to evaluate the benefits of reducing residential emissions on air pollution levels in Beijing and the surrounding region in the winter of 2010. The region in the study, which has a population of 104 million people, and frequently has air pollution levels more than six times higher than what the World Health Organization considers a safe limit, included the cities of Beijing and the surrounding Tianjin and Hebei provinces. The researchers ran computer model simulations in which they removed a varying amount of residential emissions in both Beijing alone as well as the entire Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei (BTH) region and found that reducing residential emissions resulted in corresponding drops in outdoor pollution levels.

"The residential sector has been relatively overlooked in ambient air pollution control strategies," Mauzerall said. "Our analysis indicates that air quality in the Beijing region would substantially benefit from reducing residential sector emissions from within Beijing and from surrounding provinces. Air pollution levels in Beijing would greatly benefit from a regional strategy to reduce emissions from dirty cook stoves."

The researchers concluded from their study that eliminating household emissions alone would reduce levels of small particulate pollution in the air over Beijing in winter by about 22 percent, but that eliminating household emissions in all three provinces that include Beijing would nearly double the reduction in particulate levels in the city itself.

"Reducing residential emissions from the entire region, including the surrounding rural areas, has the potential to greatly improve air quality within Beijing and its suburbs," Mauzerall said. The researchers said the government can take additional steps both in the near term and the future to reduce emissions. Natural gas, liquid petroleum gas, cleaner solid-fuel stoves and electricity can presently reduce emissions. In the long-term electricity from renewable energy sources would virtually eliminate the emissions of both air pollutants and the greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change.

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Besides Mauzerall, the paper's authors include: Jun Liu, Qi Chen, Yu Song, Xinghua Qiu, and Shiqiu Zhang of the College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Peking University; Qiang Zhang of Tsinghua University; Wei Peng of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University; Zbigniew Klimont of the Institute for Applied Systems Analysis; Weili Lin of the Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences; Kirk Smith, the school of public health, University of California, Berkeley.

The work appeared in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science and was supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation Committee of China, the European Seventh Framework Programme Project PURGE, the Collaborative Innovation Center for Regional Environmental Quality, and the Council for International Teaching and Research at Princeton University.

Liu J, Mauzerall DL, Chen Q, Zhang Q, Song Y, Peng W, Klimont Z, Qiu X, Zhang S, Hu M, Smith KR, Zhu T, 2016, Air pollutant emissions from Chinese households: A major and underappreciated ambient pollution source, Proc Nat Acad of Sci, http://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/ 10.1073/pnas.1604537113 (in press)


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