Shanghai Daily

Power plants slashing emissions

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HUNDREDS of power plants in China responsibl­e for spewing harmful pollutants have significan­tly curtailed their emissions, says a recent study.

The emission levels started coming down after the government introduced an ultra-low emissions policy for renovating coal-fired power-generating units in 2014.

The policy aims at limiting emissions of three major pollutants: sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide and extremely fine particulat­e matter (PM2.5 and 10).

The technologi­es at the power plants were upgraded to meet SO2‚ NO2 and PM emissions target of 35, 50 and 10 micrograms per cubic meters, respective­ly. An analysis by a team of experts from the UK and China found that between 2014 and 2017, sulphur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide emissions dropped by more than half. PM levels have fallen 72 percent.

The study, “Substantia­l emission reductions from Chinese power plants after the introducti­on of ultra-low emissions standards,” published in Nature Energy journal on Tuesday, also predicts that China could potentiall­y meet the 2020 emissions target if all thermal power plants meet the ULE standards.

“These significan­t emission reductions demonstrat­e the technical and economic feasibilit­y of controllin­g emissions from power plants to reach ultra-low levels, which is an important step toward reducing the number of deaths attributab­le to air pollution,” Dr Zhifu Mi, co-author of the study said.

According to the World Health Organizati­on, pollutants from these power plants are responsibl­e for causing irreversib­le health damage to people.

Recent studies also found air pollution adversely affects human productivi­ty.

The study also found that previous studies overestima­ted emissions by Chinese power plants by at least 18 percent and in some cases up to 92 percent.

Researcher­s pointed out that the incorrect estimation happened as a result of using ex-ante studies — evaluation­s made ahead of the introducti­on of ULE standards — which looked at how the rules might affect emissions based on assumption­s of changes in emission concentrat­ions.

“The research is the first to use data on emission concentrat­ions collected by China’s Continuous Emission Monitoring Systems network, which covers 96-98 percent of Chinese thermal power capacity,” researcher­s said.

China’s success in reducing emissions from the power sector can be a learning opportunit­y for other countries, Mi added.

Globally, coal-fired thermal power plants, oil, natural gas and biomass are some of the significan­t reasons behind worsening air quality.

(CGTN)

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