Publication | Closed Access
Incorporating Health Cobenefits in Decision-Making for the Decommissioning of Coal-Fired Power Plants in China
33
Citations
51
References
2020
Year
Clean Coal TechnologyEngineeringPower Plant UnitsDeep DecarbonizationSustainable EnergyEnvironmental EngineeringLow-carbon DevelopmentCarbon EmissionsEnergy PolicyCoal-fired Power PlantsIncinerationLife Cycle AssessmentCarbon UtilizationEmission ReductionCoal UtilizationClimate ChangeHealth Cobenefits
China's coal-fired power industry urgently needs deep decarbonization to meet the challenge of climate change. Regional air quality improvement and the health benefits can motivate efforts to achieve low-carbon goals. However, the health cobenefit per amount of carbon reduction may vary drastically across power plant units. The strategy of targeting more health cobenefits has been considered in designing an efficient carbon mitigation pathway, whereas this issue has not been analyzed at the unit level. In this study, an indicator called health benefit by carbon reduction (H/C) was constructed for each power unit to assess the relative potential of obtaining health cobenefits. The results reveal that the distribution of H/C values among units is extremely uneven: the first 1, 5, and 20% of the total carbon emission contributed to nearly 20, 40, and 70%, respectively, of the total health effects. The additional health benefits from H/C optimization were evaluated, and the decommissioning pathway of China's coal-fired power industry for achieving more health benefits was explored.
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