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Impacts of Ship Emissions on Air Quality in Southern China: Opportunistic Insights from the Abrupt Emission Changes in Early 2020.

Xu FengYaping MaHaipeng LinTzung-May FuYan ZhangXiaolin WangAoxing ZhangYupeng YuanZimin HanJingbo MaoDakang WangLei ZhuYujie WuYing LiXin Yang
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2023)
In early 2020, two unique events perturbed ship emissions of pollutants around Southern China, proffering insights into the impacts of ship emissions on regional air quality: the decline of ship activities due to COVID-19 and the global enforcement of low-sulfur (<0.5%) fuel oil for ships. In January and February 2020, estimated ship emissions of NO x , SO 2 , and primary PM 2.5 over Southern China dropped by 19, 71, and 58%, respectively, relative to the same period in 2019. The decline of ship NO x emissions was mostly over the coastal waters and inland waterways of Southern China due to reduced ship activities. The decline of ship SO 2 and primary PM 2.5 emissions was most pronounced outside the Chinese Domestic Emission Control Area due to the switch to low-sulfur fuel oil there. Ship emission reductions in early 2020 drove 16 to 18% decreases in surface NO 2 levels but 3.8 to 4.9% increases in surface ozone over Southern China. We estimated that ship emissions contributed 40% of surface NO 2 concentrations over Guangdong in winter. Our results indicated that future abatements of ship emissions should be implemented synergistically with reductions of land-borne anthropogenic emissions of nonmethane volatile organic compounds to effectively alleviate regional ozone pollution.
Keyphrases
  • municipal solid waste
  • particulate matter
  • life cycle
  • heavy metals
  • air pollution
  • sars cov
  • coronavirus disease
  • climate change
  • fatty acid
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • drinking water
  • polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons