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Facility-Level Emissions and Synergistic Control of Energy-Related Air Pollutants and Carbon Dioxide in China.

Shu-Xiao WangLicong HanShengyue LiShuxiao WangYan CongKaiyun LiuYu LeiHaotian ZhengGuoliang LiBofeng CaiJiming Hao
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2023)
Boilers involve ∼60% of primary energy consumption in China and emit more air pollutants and CO 2 than any other infrastructures. Here, we established a nationwide, facility-level emission data set considering over 185,000 active boilers in China by fusing multiple data sources and jointly using various technical means. The emission uncertainties and spatial allocations were significantly improved. We found that coal-fired power plant boilers were not the most emission-intensive boilers with regard to SO 2 , NO x , PM, and mercury but emitted the highest CO 2 . However, biomass- and municipal waste-fired combustion, regarded as zero-carbon technologies, emitted a large fraction of SO 2 , NO x , and PM. Future biomass or municipal waste mixing in coal-fired power plant boilers can make full use of the advantages of zero-carbon fuel and the pollution control devices of coal-fired power plants. We identified small-size boilers, medium-size boilers using circulating fluidized bed boilers, and large-size boilers located in China's coal mine bases as the main high emitters. Future focuses on high-emitter control can substantially mitigate the emissions of SO 2 by 66%, NO x by 49%, PM by 90%, mercury by 51%, and CO 2 by 46% at the most. Our study sheds light on other countries wishing to reduce their energy-related emissions and thus the related impacts on humans, ecosystems, and climates.
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