Contributions of open crop straw burning emissions to PM2.5 concentrations in China

被引:152
|
作者
Zhang, Libo [1 ]
Liu, Yongqiang [2 ]
Hao, Lu [1 ]
机构
[1] Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol, Coll Appl Meteorol, Int Ctr Ecol Meteorol & Environm, Nanjing, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
[2] US Forest Serv, Ctr Forest Disturbance Sci, USDA, Athens, GA USA
来源
ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS | 2016年 / 11卷 / 01期
关键词
straw burning; air pollution; monthly and annual emissions; PM2.5 inventories in China cities; GLOBAL FIRE EMISSIONS; WHEAT-STRAW; PARTICULATE; DIOXIDE;
D O I
10.1088/1748-9326/11/1/014014
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
PM2.5 inventories have been developed in major Chinese cities to quantify the contributions from various sources based on annual emissions. This approach, however, could substantially underestimate the contribution from open straw burning during the harvest or other active burning periods. This study examines this issue by estimating monthly and annual straw-burning PM2.5 emissions in China and comparing with them with the corresponding emissions from other anthropogenic sources. Annually burned strawPM(2.5) emissions during 1997 similar to 2013 for 31 China provinces were calculated based on crop and related burning information for 12 months based on satellite detection of agricultural burning. Annual emissions from other anthropogenic sources were collected from the literature and allocated to monthly values using air pollution index measurements. The results indicate that the annual PM2.5 emissions from open straw burning in China were 1.036 m tons. The monthly PM2.5 emission ratios of straw burning to other anthropogenic sources during June, the harvest period for many regions, were several times larger than the annual ratios at national, regional, and province levels, suggesting that, in contrast to annual emissions that were used in the PM2.5 inventories in Chinese cities to assess the contributions from other sources, monthly emissions should be used to assess the contributions from straw burning during the harvest or other active burning periods. The larger contributions from straw burning shown in this study also suggest that substantial reduction of open field straw burning would dramatically improve air quality in many Chinese regions during the harvest or other active burning periods.
引用
下载
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Impact of air pollution control policies on future PM2.5 concentrations and their source contributions in China
    Cai, Siyi
    Ma, Qiao
    Wang, Shuxiao
    Zhao, Bin
    Brauer, Michael
    Cohen, Aaron
    Martin, Randall V.
    Zhang, Qianqian
    Li, Qinbin
    Wang, Yuxuan
    Hao, Jiming
    Frostad, Joseph
    Forouzanfar, Mohammad H.
    Burnett, Richard T.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2018, 227 : 124 - 133
  • [22] Striking impacts of biomass burning on PM2.5 concentrations in Northeast China through the emission inventory improvement
    Chen, Lijiao
    Gao, Yang
    Ma, Mingchen
    Wang, Lili
    Wang, Qinglu
    Guan, Shuhui
    Yao, Xiaohong
    Gao, Huiwang
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 2023, 318
  • [23] Impact of Diesel Vehicle Emissions on PM2.5 Concentrations in Seoul Metropolitan Area during the Seasonal PM2.5 Management
    Kim, Yoonha
    Kim, Eunhye
    Kang, Yoon-Hee
    You, Seunghee
    Bae, Minah
    Son, Kyuwon
    Kim, Soontae
    JOURNAL OF KOREAN SOCIETY FOR ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 37 (01) : 169 - 190
  • [24] Field measurement on the emissions of PM, OC, EC and PAHs from indoor crop straw burning in rural China
    Wei, Siye
    Shen, Guofeng
    Zhang, Yanyan
    Xue, Miao
    Xie, Han
    Lin, Pengchuan
    Chen, Yuanchen
    Wang, Xilong
    Tao, Shu
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 2014, 184 : 18 - 24
  • [25] Modeling Studies of Source Contributions to PM2.5 in Chengdu, China
    Xu Y.-L.
    Yi A.-H.
    Xue W.-B.
    Huanjing Kexue/Environmental Science, 2020, 41 (01): : 50 - 56
  • [26] Seasonal trends in PM2.5 source contributions in Beijing, China
    Zheng, M
    Salmon, LG
    Schauer, JJ
    Zeng, LM
    Kiang, CS
    Zhang, YH
    Cass, GR
    ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2005, 39 (22) : 3967 - 3976
  • [27] PM2.5 pollution is substantially affected by ammonia emissions in China
    Wu, Yiyun
    Gu, Baojing
    Erisman, Jan Willem
    Reis, Stefan
    Fang, Yuanyuan
    Lu, Xuehe
    Zhang, Xiuming
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 2016, 218 : 86 - 94
  • [28] Contributions of meteorology and anthropoaenic emissions to the trends in winter PM2.5 in eastern China 2013-2018
    Wu, Yanxing
    Liu, Run
    Li, Yanzi
    Dong, Junjie
    Huang, Zhijiong
    Zheng, Junyu
    Liu, Shaw Chen
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2022, 22 (18) : 11945 - 11955
  • [29] Chemical compositions of primary PM2.5 derived from biomass burning emissions
    Ichikawa Y.
    Naito S.
    Asian Journal of Atmospheric Environment, 2017, 11 (2) : 79 - 95
  • [30] Has Carbon Emissions Trading Reduced PM2.5 in China?
    Liu, Jing-Yue
    Woodward, Richard T.
    Zhang, Yue-Jun
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2021, 55 (10) : 6631 - 6643