Abstract

Methane is responsible for 20% of the global warming resulting from greenhouse gas emissions. Municipal solid waste (MSW) landfills are the third largest anthropogenic source of methane and are thus important to estimating the global methane budget and evaluating its contribution to global greenhouse gas emissions. Based on the greenhouse gas inventory guidelines from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the first-order decay method used to estimate emissions from MSW landfills – and in line with MSW management in various regions – we calculated methane emissions from MSW landfills in various Chinese provinces from 2003 to 2013. During this period, methane emissions from MSW landfills increased from 1141.10 Gg to 1858.98 Gg, representing a mean annual increase of 71.79 Gg. MSW emissions tended to increase more in the northern and western provinces than in the southern and eastern provinces, as methane emissions strongly and positively correlated with population and socioeconomic demographics. MSW decontamination is growing rapidly in China, and landfills predominate in all MSW treatments; moreover, incineration has also dramatically increased in recent years.

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