Litcius/Paper detail

Large-scale renewable energy brings regionally disproportional air quality and health co-benefits in China

Yang Xie, Meng Xu, Jinlu Pu, Yujie Pan, Xiaorui Liu, Yanxu Zhang, Shasha Xu

2023iScience36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Developing renewable energy could jointly reduce air pollution, greenhouse gas emissions, and bring air pollution-related health co-benefits. However, the temporal and sub-national distributions of investment costs and human health co-benefits from renewable energy deployment remain unclear. To investigate this gap, we linked multiple models for a more comprehensive assessment of the economic-environmental-health co-benefits of renewable energy development in China. The results show that developing renewable energy can avoid 0.6 million premature mortalities, 151 million morbidities, and 111 million work-loss days in 2050. Meanwhile, the human health and economic co-benefits vary substantially across regions in China. Renewable energy can undoubtedly bring health and economic co-benefits. Nevertheless, the economic benefits lag considerably behind the high initial investment cost, first negative in 2030 (-0.6 trillion Yuan) and then positive in 2050 (2.9 trillion Yuan). Hence, renewable energy deployment strategy must be carefully designed considering the regional disparities.

Topics & Concepts

ChinaRenewable energyScale (ratio)Air quality indexQuality (philosophy)Environmental scienceNanotechnologyNatural resource economicsEngineeringMaterials sciencePolitical scienceGeographyEconomicsPhysicsMeteorologyElectrical engineeringCartographyQuantum mechanicsLawAir Quality and Health ImpactsEnergy and Environment ImpactsClimate Change and Health Impacts