Abstract

Both air pollution and greenhouse effect have become important issues with regard to environmental protection both in China and across the world. Consumption of energy derived from coal, oil, and natural gas forms the main source of China’s major air pollutants, SO2 and NOX, as well as the major greenhouse gas CO2. The energy structure adjustment approach provides a sensible way, not only to achieve climate change mitigation and air pollutant reduction, but also to reduce abatement costs. In this paper, a multi-objective optimization method was adopted in order to analyze the collaborative optimization of emissions and abatement costs for both air pollutants and greenhouse gases. As a typical industrial city and economic center with fossil fuels as its main energy source, Tianjin of China is used as the research sample to prove that this method can mitigate air pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions and reduce abatement costs. Through demonstration, the results show that the optimization method proposed can reduce SO2, NOX, and CO2 emissions by 27,000 tons, 33,000 tons, and 29,000 tons, respectively, and the abatement costs will be reduced by 620 million yuan by adjusting the energy structure of Tianjin. The proposed method also suggests that China can achieve reductions of abatement cost and greenhouse gas and air pollutant emissions under the proposed energy structure. The results indicate that collaborative optimization would help China and other countries cope with climate change while improving domestic air quality.

Highlights

  • China faces dual pressures from air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions

  • A “top-down”, mandatory commitment to the carbon emission reduction model dictated by the Kyoto Protocol is gradually being transformed into a “bottom-up”, “Nationally Determined Contributions” (NDC) mechanism of the Paris Agreement [1]

  • This paper focuses on the collaborative optimization of emissions and abatement costs

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Summary

Introduction

China faces dual pressures from air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. A “top-down”, mandatory commitment to the carbon emission reduction model dictated by the Kyoto Protocol is gradually being transformed into a “bottom-up”, “Nationally Determined Contributions” (NDC) mechanism of the Paris Agreement [1]. Due to the severity of domestic air pollution, combined with the commitment to join the international community in implementing an independent policy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, both the “13th Five-Year Plan for Controlling Greenhouse Gas Emissions” and the “13th Five-Year Plan for Ecological Environmental Protection” issued by the State Council mention “enhanced coordinated control of carbon emissions and atmospheric pollutant emissions”. The collaborative governance of air pollutants and greenhouse gases is an excellent choice and policy outlet for China during a critical stage in its economic transformation

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