2020
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/aba97b
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Health and economic benefit of China’s greenhouse gas mitigation by 2050

Abstract: As the biggest greenhouse gases (GHGs) emitter, China’s climate mitigation has tremendous contributions to the global carbon and air pollutants reductions. This study is trying to extract the co-benefit on air quality, public health and economic costs in China and worldwide from China’s GHGs mitigation policy. We construct two scenarios, with moderate climate mitigation action worldwide, versus more stringent climate mitigation action in China. We use the GAINS model to predict the GHGs and air pollutants emis… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(19 citation statements)
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References 44 publications
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“…For example, previous studies have assessed the health benefits of global GHG and short-lived climate pollutant reductions through idealized scenarios (Anenberg et al, 2012;Shindell et al, 2012;West et al, 2013;Harmsen et al, 2020;Vandyck et al, 2020) and via nationally determined contributions to the Paris Agreement (Markandya et al, 2018;Sampedro, 2020). Recent studies have also assessed air quality and health benefits of GHG mitigation at national (Xie et al, 2020;Yang et al, 2021), state (Wang et al, 2020), and city scales (Johnson et al, 2020). These studies often find that the global health benefits exceed mitigation costs, though results are more nuanced at national or regional scales (Markandya and Sampedro, 2020).…”
Section: Air Qualitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, previous studies have assessed the health benefits of global GHG and short-lived climate pollutant reductions through idealized scenarios (Anenberg et al, 2012;Shindell et al, 2012;West et al, 2013;Harmsen et al, 2020;Vandyck et al, 2020) and via nationally determined contributions to the Paris Agreement (Markandya et al, 2018;Sampedro, 2020). Recent studies have also assessed air quality and health benefits of GHG mitigation at national (Xie et al, 2020;Yang et al, 2021), state (Wang et al, 2020), and city scales (Johnson et al, 2020). These studies often find that the global health benefits exceed mitigation costs, though results are more nuanced at national or regional scales (Markandya and Sampedro, 2020).…”
Section: Air Qualitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We estimated the economic losses due to DAHP in Chinese urban areas in 2019 and when outdoor meet the WHO AQG 2021. The value of statistical life (VSL) for mortality is widely used to convert the health effect of air pollution from premature deaths into monetary value [22][23][24][25] . The VSLs vary with cities and social-economic factors.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Exposure to incremental PM 2.5 concentrations leads to several health endpoints. In this study, we adopted the linear concentration-response functions (CRF) from [33,39] to calculate the morbidity of several diseases, premature deaths, and work loss days. The linear function assumes the CRF is a constant and in the 95% confidence interval [40][41][42].…”
Section: Imed|hel Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%