Blue skies over China: The effect of pollution-control on solar power generation and revenues.

Air pollution is the single most important environmental health risk, causing about 7 million premature deaths annually worldwide. China is the world's largest emitter of anthropogenic air pollutants, which causes major negative health consequences. The Chinese government has implemented severa...

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Main Authors: Mercè Labordena, David Neubauer, Doris Folini, Anthony Patt, Johan Lilliestam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6248963?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-830ea7a8504448d7984e22bab5809c752020-11-24T21:35:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011311e020702810.1371/journal.pone.0207028Blue skies over China: The effect of pollution-control on solar power generation and revenues.Mercè LabordenaDavid NeubauerDoris FoliniAnthony PattJohan LilliestamAir pollution is the single most important environmental health risk, causing about 7 million premature deaths annually worldwide. China is the world's largest emitter of anthropogenic air pollutants, which causes major negative health consequences. The Chinese government has implemented several policies to reduce air pollution, with success in some but far from all sectors. In addition to the health benefits, reducing air pollution will have side-benefits, such as an increase in the electricity generated by the solar photovoltaic panels via an increase in surface solar irradiance through a reduction of haze and aerosol-impacted clouds. We use the global aerosol-climate model ECHAM6-HAM2 with the bottom-up emissions inventory from the Community Emission Data System and quantify the geographically specific increases in generation and economic revenue to the Chinese solar photovoltaic fleet as a result of reducing or eliminating air pollution from the energy, industrial, transport, and residential and commercial sectors. We find that by 2040, the gains will be substantial: the projected solar photovoltaic fleet would produce between 85-158 TWh/year of additional power in clean compared to polluted air, generating US$6.9-10.1 billion of additional annual revenues in the solar photovoltaic sector alone. Furthermore, we quantify the cost of adopting best-practice emission standards in all sectors and find that the revenue gains from the increased solar photovoltaic generation could offset up to about 13-17% of the costs of strong air pollution control measures designed to reach near-zero emissions in all sectors. Hence, reducing air pollution in China will not only have clear health benefits, but the side-effect of increased solar power generation would also offset a sizeable share of the costs of air pollution control measures.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6248963?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mercè Labordena
David Neubauer
Doris Folini
Anthony Patt
Johan Lilliestam
spellingShingle Mercè Labordena
David Neubauer
Doris Folini
Anthony Patt
Johan Lilliestam
Blue skies over China: The effect of pollution-control on solar power generation and revenues.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Mercè Labordena
David Neubauer
Doris Folini
Anthony Patt
Johan Lilliestam
author_sort Mercè Labordena
title Blue skies over China: The effect of pollution-control on solar power generation and revenues.
title_short Blue skies over China: The effect of pollution-control on solar power generation and revenues.
title_full Blue skies over China: The effect of pollution-control on solar power generation and revenues.
title_fullStr Blue skies over China: The effect of pollution-control on solar power generation and revenues.
title_full_unstemmed Blue skies over China: The effect of pollution-control on solar power generation and revenues.
title_sort blue skies over china: the effect of pollution-control on solar power generation and revenues.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Air pollution is the single most important environmental health risk, causing about 7 million premature deaths annually worldwide. China is the world's largest emitter of anthropogenic air pollutants, which causes major negative health consequences. The Chinese government has implemented several policies to reduce air pollution, with success in some but far from all sectors. In addition to the health benefits, reducing air pollution will have side-benefits, such as an increase in the electricity generated by the solar photovoltaic panels via an increase in surface solar irradiance through a reduction of haze and aerosol-impacted clouds. We use the global aerosol-climate model ECHAM6-HAM2 with the bottom-up emissions inventory from the Community Emission Data System and quantify the geographically specific increases in generation and economic revenue to the Chinese solar photovoltaic fleet as a result of reducing or eliminating air pollution from the energy, industrial, transport, and residential and commercial sectors. We find that by 2040, the gains will be substantial: the projected solar photovoltaic fleet would produce between 85-158 TWh/year of additional power in clean compared to polluted air, generating US$6.9-10.1 billion of additional annual revenues in the solar photovoltaic sector alone. Furthermore, we quantify the cost of adopting best-practice emission standards in all sectors and find that the revenue gains from the increased solar photovoltaic generation could offset up to about 13-17% of the costs of strong air pollution control measures designed to reach near-zero emissions in all sectors. Hence, reducing air pollution in China will not only have clear health benefits, but the side-effect of increased solar power generation would also offset a sizeable share of the costs of air pollution control measures.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6248963?pdf=render
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