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Shipping emissions and their impacts on air quality in China

Authors :
Qingyan Fu
Zoran Ristovski
Xin Yang
Yan Zhang
Lidia Morawska
Liping Yang
Cheng Huang
Richard J. C. Brown
Source :
The Science of the total environment.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Highlights - The first review of shipping emissions in China - An overview of the broad field of ship emissions and their atmospheric impacts in China - Future work in shipping related air pollution field has been outlooked. Abstract China has > 400 ports, is home to 7 of 10 biggest ports in the world and its waterway infrastructure construction has been accelerating over the past years. But the increasing number of ports and ships means increasing emissions, and in turn, increasing impact on local and regional air pollution. This paper presents an overview of the broad field of ship emissions in China and their atmospheric impacts, including topics of ship engine emissions and control, ship emission factors and their measurements, developing of ship emission inventories, shipping and port emissions of the main shipping areas in China, and quantitative contribution of shipping emissions to the local and regional air pollution. There have been an increasing number of studies published on all the above aspects, yet, this review identified some critical research gaps, filling of which is necessary for better control of ship emissions, and for lowering their impacts. In particular, there are very few studies on inland ports and river ships, and there are few national scale ship emission inventories available for China. While advanced method to estimate ship emission based on ship AIS activities makes it now possible to develop high spatial- and temporal-resolution emission inventories, the ship emission factors used in Chinese studies have been based mainly on foreign measurements. Further, the contribution of ship emissions to air pollution in coastal cities, the dispersion of pollution plumes emitted by ships, or the chemical evolution process along the transmission path, have so far not been systematically studied in China.

Details

ISSN :
18791026
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Science of the total environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a5bbbd6f90243c1d2e6145f59b211a91