J 2019

Clean air for some : Unintended spillover effects of regional air pollution policies

FANG, Delin; Bin CHEN; Klaus HUBACEK; Ruijing NI; Lulu CHEN et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Clean air for some : Unintended spillover effects of regional air pollution policies

Authors

FANG, Delin (156 China); Bin CHEN (156 China); Klaus HUBACEK (40 Austria, guarantor, belonging to the institution); Ruijing NI (156 China); Lulu CHEN (156 China); Kuishuang FENG (840 United States of America) and Jintai LIN (156 China)

Edition

Science Advances, Washington, DC, American association for the advancement of science, 2019, 2375-2548

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Country of publisher

United States of America

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14230/19:00107374

Organization

Fakulta sociálních studií – Repository – Repository

UT WoS

000466398400060

EID Scopus

2-s2.0-85065202659

Keywords in English

air pollution; local air pollution; emission; input-output analysis;China

Links

GA16-17978S, research and development project.
Changed: 8/9/2020 01:39, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

V originále

China has enacted a number of ambitious pollution control policies to mitigate air pollution in urban areas. Unintended side effects of these policies to other environmental policy arenas and regions have largely been ignored. To bridge this gap, we use a multiregional input-output model in combination with an atmospheric chemical transport model to simulate clean air policy scenarios and evaluate their environmental impacts on primary PM2.5 and secondary precursor emissions, as well as CO2 emissions and water consumption, in the target region and spillover effects to other regions. Our results show that the reduction in primary PM2.5 and secondary precursor emissions in the target regions comes at the cost of increasing emissions especially in neighboring provinces. Similarly, co-benefits of lower CO2 emissions and reduced water consumption in the target region are achieved at the expense of higher impacts elsewhere, through outsourcing production to less developed regions in China.

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