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Health Impacts of Emissions from Large Point Sources

Health Impacts of Emissions from Large Point Sources. Christer Ågren The Swedish NGO Secretariat on Acid Rain www.acidrain.org. The study. Work done by Mike Holland , EMRC, UK.

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Health Impacts of Emissions from Large Point Sources

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  1. Health Impacts of Emissions from Large Point Sources Christer Ågren The Swedish NGO Secretariat on Acid Rain www.acidrain.org

  2. The study • Work done by Mike Holland, EMRC, UK. • Funded by the Swedish NGO Secretariat on Acid Rain, and cofinanced by the European Commission DG Research through the Methodex Project.

  3. Methodology • Combines CAFE health assessment methodology with SENCO’s database on emissions from Large Point Sources (LPS), to assess health-related damages linked with emissions of SO2 and NOx on a plant-by-plant basis. • Health impacts from secondary PM (sulphate and nitrate aerosols), quantified – primary particles not included.

  4. Results for EU25 Secondary PM from LPS linked to i.a.: • 790,000 life years lost (equivalent to 74,000 premature deaths); • 8,100 cardiac hospital admissions; and, • 73 million restricted activity days among the working age population. In economic terms, the total health damage from SO2 and NOx emissions from LPS is in the order of € 57-170 billion per year.

  5. Results for EU25

  6. Results for ”rest of Europe”

  7. The worst plants • Some of the worst polluting plants may each be responsible for the annual loss of between 10,000 and 20,000 life years. • In EU25, about 50% of the damage is caused by the 120 most damaging plants, and 90% by 911 plants. (The total number of EU25 plants in the database is ~6,300.) • Outside EU25, about 50% of the damage is caused by the 20 most damaging plants, and 90% by 128 plants. (The total number of non-EU plants in the database is ~530.)

  8. Cumulative distribution of impacts(EU25)

  9. Map with the large point sources in Europe that cause the greatest health damage due to secondary PM from SO2 and NOx emissions

  10. The 10 most damaging plants in each of the two regions

  11. Estimates of damage per unit of useful energy output (EU25)

  12. Some conclusions • Total health impacts from SO2 and NOx emissions from LPS in EU25 is in the order of € 57-170 billion per year. The number of life years lost is estimated at 790,000, i.e. about 21% of the total health damage from air pollution estimated by CAFE. • A relatively small number of highly polluting plants are responsible for very significant damage – some plants may each cause annual health damage equivalent to € 800 – 1400 million. • There is wide variation in the damage per per unit of useful output of energy – for many plants the estimated damage in eurocents/kWh is greater than typical prices charged.

  13. Uncertainties • Emission data are typically from around 2000/2001 – figures may now have changed. • Emission data for plants outside EU25 less certain. • Country-average damage factors (not site-specific modelling). • Atmospheric transfer data (EMEP model). • Exposure – response functions for fine particles. • Are all types of fine particles equally damaging? • Economic valuation of impacts.

  14. References • Holland, M. (2006) Health Impacts of Emissions From Large Point Sources. Second edition. Report 19, Air Pollution and Climate Series of the Swedish NGO Secretariat on Acid Rain, Göteborg, Sweden.http://www.acidrain.org/pages/publications/reports.asp • Barrett, M. (2004) Atmospheric Emissions from Large Point Sources in Europe. Report 17, Air Pollution and Climate Series of the Swedish NGO Secretariat on Acid Rain, Göteborg, Sweden. http://www.acidrain.org/pages/publications/reports.asp • AEA Technology and others (2004) Benefit analysis for CAFE: Volume 1: Overview of Methodology. http://cafe-cba.aeat.com/files/CAFE%20CBA%20Methodology%20Final%20Volume%201%20v4e.pdf • AEA Technology and others (2004-2005) A series of reports on the cost-benefit analysis of the CAFE programme is available via http://www.cafe-cba.org/ • Holland, M. (2006) Updated estimates of pollution damage per tonne emission for the BeTa database. Internal report under the European Commission Methodex Project.

  15. Health impacts quantified

  16. Impacts not included

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