Air Pollution: Clean Up Our Skies

- by Julia Schmale, Novem­ber 19, 2014, Nature

In Decem­ber, the world’s atten­tion will fall on cli­mate-change nego­ti­a­tions at the 20th Unit­ed Nations Frame­work Con­ven­tion on Cli­mate Change (UNFCCC) Con­fer­ence of the Par­ties in Lima, Peru. The empha­sis will be on reduc­ing emis­sions of long-term atmos­pher­ic dri­vers such as car­bon diox­ide, the effects of which will be felt for cen­turies. At the same time, the mit­i­ga­tion of short-lived cli­mate-forc­ing pol­lu­tants (SLCPs) such as methane, black car­bon and ozone — which are active for days or decades — must be addressed (see ‘Com­pounds of concern’).

SLCPs cause poor air qual­i­ty and are respon­si­ble for res­pi­ra­to­ry and car­dio­vas­cu­lar dis­eases. Par­tic­u­late mat­ter in the atmos­phere is the lead­ing envi­ron­men­tal cause of ill health, and air pol­lu­tion is caus­ing about 7 mil­lion pre­ma­ture deaths annu­al­ly. Inter­ac­tions between warm­ing, air pol­lu­tion and the urban heat-island effect (which caus­es cities to be marked­ly warmer than their sur­round­ing rur­al areas) will raise health bur­dens for cities world­wide by mid-cen­tu­ry. Air pol­lu­tion also dam­ages ecosys­tems and agriculture.

Cur­rent air-qual­i­ty leg­is­la­tion falls short. Exist­ing mea­sures would pre­vent just 2 mil­lion pre­ma­ture deaths by 2040. We esti­mate that around 40 mil­lion more such deaths would be avoid­ed if con­cen­tra­tions of methane, black car­bon and oth­er air pol­lu­tants were halved world­wide by 2030.

This is not an ‘either-or’ deci­sion: coor­di­nat­ed action on both cli­mate change and air pol­lu­tion is nec­es­sary. And it is tractable: for exam­ple, elec­tric-car shar­ing or shift­ing from fos­sil fuels to renew­able pow­er gen­er­a­tion would reduce con­sump­tion and over­all emis­sions and lead to behav­iour­al shifts that are ben­e­fi­cial in both the near and long term.

But defin­ing joint CO2 and SLCP reduc­tion goals is dif­fi­cult. Researchers need to spell out the ben­e­fits and trade-offs of sep­a­rate and joint air-pol­lu­tion and cli­mate-change mit­i­ga­tion in terms of pub­lic health, ecosys­tem pro­tec­tion, cli­mate change and costs. A suite of mit­i­ga­tion poli­cies must be designed and applied on all scales — from cities to the glob­al arena.

Dou­ble jeopardy

Stud­ies esti­mate that rig­or­ous reduc­tions of glob­al methane and black-car­bon-relat­ed emis­sions by 2030 could pre­vent around 2.4 mil­lion pre­ma­ture deaths per year that result from air pol­lu­tion, and save 50 mil­lion tonnes of crops through avoid­ed ozone dam­age (methane is a pre­cur­sor for ozone pro­duc­tion). Glob­al mean tem­per­a­ture rise would be slowed by about 0.5 °C by mid-cen­tu­ry. The rate of sea-lev­el rise would be reduced by 20% in the first half of this cen­tu­ry by such mea­sures alone, and by 50% in the sec­ond half if CO2 and SLCP mit­i­ga­tion are combined.

Low­er air pol­lu­tion also has soci­etal ben­e­fits. Methane cap­tured from land­fills or manure can be used to run res­i­den­tial stoves, for exam­ple. In devel­op­ing coun­tries, replac­ing con­ven­tion­al cook­ing stoves with clean-burn­ing tech­nolo­gies allows peo­ple — women and chil­dren, in par­tic­u­lar — to invest time in edu­ca­tion or finan­cial­ly reward­ing work, rather than spend­ing time col­lect­ing wood or oth­er mate­ri­als for basic fam­i­ly needs.

All SLCPs must be reduced in con­cert. Sul­phate aerosols cool the cli­mate, as hap­pens fol­low­ing vol­canic erup­tions. But delay­ing sul­phur diox­ide mit­i­ga­tion as a way to tem­porar­i­ly mask glob­al warm­ing is prob­lem­at­ic. Greater stress­es on peo­ple’s health and the envi­ron­ment already result from today’s enhanced par­tic­u­late con­cen­tra­tions and acid­i­fied rain.

Coor­di­nat­ed action to mit­i­gate SLCPs and CO2 is ham­pered by frag­ment­ed poli­cies. For exam­ple, ener­gy min­istries tend to focus on CO2 reduc­tions and envi­ron­ment min­istries man­age air qual­i­ty. Green­house gas­es are sub­ject to glob­al agree­ments, where­as air pol­lu­tants are more usu­al­ly lim­it­ed local­ly by leg­is­la­tion. Reg­u­la­tion of dif­fer­ent cli­mate-forc­ing com­pounds is patchy.

Anthro­pogenic emis­sions of methane are pre­dict­ed to increase by about 25% (more than 70 mil­lion tonnes annu­al­ly) by 2030, yet the gas is hard­ly reg­u­lat­ed. Methane is cov­ered by the Kyoto Pro­to­col, but most coun­tries’ con­trols focus on CO2. In the Euro­pean Union (EU), for exam­ple, methane is not cov­ered by the nation­al emis­sions ceil­ing direc­tive, the direc­tive on ambi­ent air qual­i­ty or the EU Emis­sions Trad­ing Sys­tem. The EU’s indus­tri­al emis­sions direc­tive omits major sources of the gas, such as cat­tle farming.

Air-qual­i­ty poli­cies in the EU and the Unit­ed States have been par­tial­ly suc­cess­ful in reduc­ing peri­ods of extreme ozone con­cen­tra­tion. But aver­age region­al con­cen­tra­tions have not declined in the past two decades across Europe, and there is still no legal­ly bind­ing lim­it, only a tar­get. Trends in the Unit­ed States are mixed and vary sea­son­al­ly; in east Asia, sur­face ozone is increasing.

For black car­bon, there are almost no reg­u­la­to­ry oblig­a­tions to report emis­sions or mea­sure ambi­ent con­cen­tra­tions. Few region­al and local assess­ments have been made. Lit­tle change in glob­al black car­bon emis­sions is pre­dict­ed by 2030, because reduc­tions in North Amer­i­ca, Europe and north­east and south­east Asia and the Pacif­ic will be off­set by increas­es in south, west and cen­tral Asia and in Africa.

Unlinked and nar­row air pol­lu­tion and cli­mate-pol­i­cy inter­ven­tions can have mixed results on both fronts. In the EU, for exam­ple, leg­is­lat­ed vehi­cle-emis­sions lim­its have reduced par­tic­u­late con­cen­tra­tions by 45% between 1995 and 2008 and are pro­ject­ed to reduce black car­bon by more than 90% by 2025 com­pared with 2000. Yet CO2emissions from the ever-grow­ing trans­port sec­tor are ris­ing. And air qual­i­ty is not under con­trol. Unreg­u­lat­ed res­i­den­tial emis­sions from bio­mass heat­ing are ris­ing, and will account for 80% of black-car­bon emis­sions in Europe in 2025.

Also prob­lem­at­ic are lax tar­gets. For exam­ple, the annu­al EU lim­it for par­tic­u­late mat­ter small­er than 2.5 microme­tres (PM2.5) that will be bind­ing by 2015 is 2.5 times high­er than that rec­om­mend­ed by the World Health Orga­ni­za­tion (WHO). And the cur­rent PM10 (par­tic­u­lates small­er than 10 microme­tres) lim­it is twice that rec­om­mend­ed by the WHO. If the EU meets its lim­it on PM10, no fur­ther action to meet the legal require­ments will be need­ed, because the PM2.5value will also be met.

“Ener­gy min­istries tend to focus on CO2reduc­tions and envi­ron­ment min­istries man­age air quality.”

Some coor­di­nat­ed efforts to reduce air pol­lu­tion and slow cli­mate change have begun. The Cli­mate and Clean Air Coali­tion to Reduce Short-Lived Cli­mate Pol­lu­tants (CCAC), formed in 2012, now includes 42 nations, the Euro­pean Com­mis­sion and more than 50 orga­ni­za­tions. It focus­es on mit­i­gat­ing methane and black-car­bon emis­sions for trans­port, brick, oil and nat­ur­al-gas pro­duc­tion, house­hold cook­ing and heat­ing. Since 2009, the Arc­tic Coun­cil runs task forces to reduce black-car­bon and methane emis­sions to slow cli­mate change in the region, and has pro­duced two reports in addi­tion to a sci­en­tif­ic assess­ment of black car­bon in the Arc­tic. But so far, only Nor­way has devel­oped a nation­al action plan to reduce SLCPs.

None of these efforts address­es struc­tur­al and behav­iour­al changes. Coor­di­nat­ed action to reduce SLCPs and CO2simultaneously is not an objec­tive, because it is assumed that par­al­lel reduc­tions will hap­pen under dif­fer­ent pol­i­cy umbrellas.

Dou­ble duty

Effec­tive mit­i­ga­tion of SLCPs will require detailed assess­ments of the mul­ti­ple impacts of emit­ted air pol­lu­tants togeth­er with CO2, their sources, their atmos­pher­ic inter­ac­tions and their poten­tial for mitigation.

Com­bined efforts at the city and state lev­el will be par­tic­u­lar­ly impor­tant because this is where most peo­ple are exposed to air pol­lu­tion, and 75% of glob­al CO2emissions is gen­er­at­ed in cities. Posi­tions and task forces should be cre­at­ed to pro­mote joint emis­sions-reduc­tion strate­gies across munic­i­pal and region­al depart­ments. For exam­ple, cli­mate poli­cies that encour­age com­bined heat and pow­er plants with low pow­er capac­i­ties for cities — thus poten­tial­ly exempt­ing them from air-qual­i­ty reg­u­la­tions— should be avoided.

Scal­ing up and coor­di­nat­ing local efforts and nation­al strate­gies are nec­es­sary. For exam­ple, local efforts in the Arc­tic can be only part­ly effec­tive because the region is sub­ject to import­ed pol­lu­tion from the res­i­den­tial and trans­port sec­tors of coun­tries at low­er latitudes.

“Unlinked and nar­row air pol­lu­tion and cli­mate-pol­i­cy inter­ven­tions can have mixed results on both fronts.”

Glob­al orga­ni­za­tions such as the CCAC, the World Mete­o­ro­log­i­cal Orga­ni­za­tion and the WHO could assume coor­di­nat­ing roles. Arc­tic Coun­cil mem­ber states should take a lead­er­ship role in nation­al actions to reduce black car­bon and methane at their next min­is­te­r­i­al meet­ing in 2015. The Euro­pean Com­mis­sion should pro­pose ambi­tious emis­sions lim­its for methane to the nation­al emis­sions ceil­ing directive.

It is impor­tant that steps to lim­it SLCPs do not dis­tract from CO2mitigation, and vice ver­sa. We cal­cu­late, build­ing on work by D.S. and col­leagues, that a delay of 20 years in reduc­ing CO2emissions would result in 0.4 °C more warm­ing by the end of the cen­tu­ry than if mea­sures were put in place imme­di­ate­ly, with the result that the 2 °C tem­per­a­ture mark would be crossed in the mid-2060s rather than just after 2100 (see ‘Clean air’).

The 2015 Con­fer­ence of the Par­ties meet­ing in Paris needs to pur­sue its pri­ma­ry mis­sion to reduce CO2for the cli­mate’s sake. That said, the sci­en­tif­ic com­mu­ni­ty must speak out against rec­om­men­da­tions — explic­it or implic­it— to exclude SLCPs from dis­cus­sions of cli­mate-change mit­i­ga­tion or to delay their reduc­tion. Tens of mil­lions of lives are at stake, along with dam­age to agri­cul­ture, ecosys­tems and cul­tur­al heritage.


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