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Tracing fossil-based plastics, chemicals and fertilizers production in China.

Meng JiangYuheng CaoChanggong LiuDingjiang ChenWenji ZhouQian WenHejiang YuJian JiangYucheng RenShanying HuEdgar G HertwichBing Zhu
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Phasing down fossil fuels is crucial for climate mitigation. Even though 80-90% of fossil fuels are used to provide energy, their use as feedstock to produce plastics, fertilizers, and chemicals, is associated with substantial CO 2 emissions. However, our understanding of hard-to-abate chemical production remains limited. Here we developed a chemical process-based material flow model to investigate the non-energy use of fossil fuels and CO 2 emissions in China. Results show in 2017, the chemical industry used 0.18 Gt of coal, 88.8 Mt of crude oil, and 12.9 Mt of natural gas as feedstock, constituting 5%, 15%, and 7% of China's respective total use. Coal-fed production of methanol, ammonia, and PVCs contributes to 0.27 Gt CO 2 emissions ( ~ 3% of China's emissions). As China seeks to balance high CO 2 emissions of coal-fed production with import dependence on oil and gas, improving energy efficiency and coupling green hydrogen emerges as attractive alternatives for decarbonization.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • room temperature
  • municipal solid waste
  • particulate matter
  • heavy metals
  • life cycle
  • risk assessment
  • fatty acid
  • carbon dioxide
  • anaerobic digestion