Abstract

Abstract. Shipping is an important source of air pollutants, from the global to the local scale. Ships emit substantial amounts of sulfur dioxides, nitrogen dioxides, and particulate matter in the vicinity of coasts, threatening the health of the coastal population, especially in harbour cities. Reductions in emissions due to shipping have been targeted by several regulations. Nevertheless, effects of these regulations come into force with temporal delays, global ship traffic is expected to grow in the future, and other land-based anthropogenic emissions might decrease. Thus, it is necessary to investigate combined impacts to identify the impact of shipping activities on air quality, population exposure, and health effects in the future. We investigated the future effect of shipping emissions on air quality and related health effects considering different scenarios of the development of shipping under current regional trends of economic growth and already decided regulations in the Gothenburg urban area in 2040. Additionally, we investigated the impact of a large-scale implementation of shore electricity in the Port of Gothenburg. For this purpose, we established a one-way nested chemistry transport modelling (CTM) system from the global to the urban scale, to calculate pollutant concentrations, population-weighted concentrations, and health effects related to NO2, PM2.5, and O3. The simulated concentrations of NO2 and PM2.5 in future scenarios for the year 2040 are in general very low with up to 4 ppb for NO2 and up to 3.5 µg m−3 PM2.5 in the urban areas which are not close to the port area. From 2012 the simulated overall exposure to PM2.5 decreased by approximately 30 % in simulated future scenarios; for NO2 the decrease was over 60 %. The simulated concentrations of O3 increased from the year 2012 to 2040 by about 20 %. In general, the contributions of local shipping emissions in 2040 focus on the harbour area but to some extent also influence the rest of the city domain. The simulated impact of onshore electricity implementation for shipping in 2040 shows reductions for NO2 in the port of up to 30 %, while increasing O3 of up to 3 %. Implementation of onshore electricity for ships at berth leads to additional local reduction potentials of up to 3 % for PM2.5 and 12 % for SO2 in the port area. All future scenarios show substantial decreases in population-weighted exposure and health-effect impacts.

Highlights

  • Shipping is an important source of air pollutants, from the global to the local scale

  • We investigated the future effect of shipping emissions on air quality and related health effects considering different scenarios of the development of shipping under current regional trends of economic growth and already decided regulations in the Gothenburg urban area in 2040

  • We established a one-way nested chemistry transport modelling (CTM) system from the global to the urban scale, to calculate pollutant concentrations, population-weighted concentrations, and health effects related to NO2, PM2.5, and O3

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Summary

Introduction

Shipping is an important source of air pollutants, from the global to the local scale. Cofala et al (2018) assessed impacts of the implementation of emission control areas for SOx and NOx in all European seas in several alternative scenarios studying the years 2030, 2040, and 2050 and provided cost–benefit analyses for these different alternatives. In the scenario without climate measures in 2030 the shipping contributions to annual mean PM2.5 concentrations vary from ∼ 0.2 to 2 μg m−3, while an introduction of additional SECA and NECA rules as in the North and Baltic seas has the potential to avoid approximately 50 % of PM2.5. The goal of the present study is to investigate the future effect of shipping emissions on air quality and related health effects considering the development of shipping under current regional trends of economic growth and already decided regulations in the Gothenburg urban area in 2040. Part 1 by Tang et al (2020) is published in the same special issue

The city of Gothenburg
Global- to urban-scale CTM system setup
Boundary conditions
Meteorological fields
Current and future land-based emission inventories
Exposure and health impact assessment
Ship emission inventories for the Gothenburg area
Future scenarios for shipping emissions
Future reference scenario BAU2040
NOx regulation
Future scenario EEDI2040
Future shoreside electricity scenarios – BAU2040LP and EEDI2040LP
Scenario setup
Future impact of shipping on concentrations of pollutants
Air quality changes in 2040 compared to the present day
Influence of ship emissions in the future scenarios
Influence of shoreside electricity use in future scenarios
Impact of future shipping on population exposure
Impact of future shipping on health effects
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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