| Literature DB >> 33330312 |
Ciaran L Gallagher1, Tracey Holloway1,2.
Abstract
Research on air quality and human health "co-benefits" from climate mitigation strategies represents a growing area of policy-relevant scholarship. Compared to other aspects of climate and energy policy evaluation, however, there are still relatively few of these co-benefits analyses. This sparsity reflects a historical disconnect between research quantifying energy and climate, and research dealing with air quality and health. The air quality co-benefits of climate, clean energy, and transportation electrification policies are typically assessed with models spanning social, physical, chemical, and biological systems. This review article summarizes studies to date and presents methods used for these interdisciplinary analyses. Studies in the peer-reviewed literature (n = 26) have evaluated carbon pricing, renewable portfolio standards, energy efficiency, renewable energy deployment, and clean transportation. A number of major findings have emerged from these studies: [1] decarbonization strategies can reduce air pollution disproportionally on the most polluted days; [2] renewable energy deployment and climate policies offer the highest health and economic benefits in regions with greater reliance on coal generation; [3] monetized air quality health co-benefits can offset costs of climate policy implementation; [4] monetized co-benefits typically exceed the levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) of renewable energies; [5] Electric vehicle (EV) adoption generally improves air quality on peak pollution days, but can result in ozone dis-benefits in urban centers due to the titration of ozone with nitrogen oxides. Drawing from these published studies, we review the state of knowledge on climate co-benefits to air quality and health, identifying opportunities for policy action and further research.Entities:
Keywords: climate mitigation; electric vehicles (EV); integrated assessment modeling; interdisciplinary; renewable energy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33330312 PMCID: PMC7717953 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.563358
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1A schematic of the co-benefits from climate mitigation strategies due to the relationships between climate change and air quality.
Scope and methods for research included in the literature review of climate policy air quality co-benefits.
| Burtraw et al. ( | Quantify the ancillary benefits of a $25 and $75 carbon tax | National | Capacity expansion model | Reduced form |
| Zapata et al. ( | Evaluate PM2.5 reduction co-benefits from California's AB 32 | State | Emissions inventory | Full physics |
| Thompson et al. ( | Compare national carbon reduction policies: Clean energy standard, Transportation policy, and Cap-and-Trade | National | Computable general equilibrium model | Full physics |
| Driscoll et al. ( | Compare U.S. power plant carbon standards (three scenarios) and Carbon Price | National | Capacity expansion model | Full physics |
| Thompson et al. ( | Compare subnational climate policies in U.S. Northeast: Cap-and-Trade vs. Clean Energy Standard | Regional | Computable general equilibrium model | Full physics |
| Barbose et al. ( | Evaluate the co-benefits of complying Renewable Portfolio Standards as of 2013 | National | Data and analysis tool | Reduced form |
| Ebrahimi et al. ( | Evaluate air quality impacts of widespread electrification in California | State | Capacity expansion model | Full physics |
| Dimanchev et al. ( | Compare subnational climate policies in the Rust Belt: Renewable Portfolio Standards (three scenarios) vs. Carbon price | Regional | Computable general equilibrium model | Reduced form |
| Zhao et al. ( | Compare abatement costs and health co-benefits between two deep decarbonization scenarios in California | State | Emission inventory | Full physics |
Scope and methods for transportation focused research.
| Thompson et al. ( | Replace 20% of conventional vehicles with plug-in hybrid EVs during an August 2002 air pollution episode in the PJM area | Regional | Emissions inventory | Full physics |
| Brinkman et al. ( | Ozone impacts of 30 vs. 100% plug-in hybrid EVs in Denver with and without controlled charging | Metropolitan | Electricity dispatch model, Emissions inventory, Mobile emissions simulator | Full physics |
| Grabow et al. ( | Eliminate short automobile trips (<8 km) in 11 metropolitan areas in the Upper Midwest | Regional | Emissions inventory | Full physics |
| Bickford et al. ( | Shift freight transport from truck to rail in the Upper Midwest | Regional | Emissions inventory, Mobile emissions database | Full physics |
| Weis et al. ( | Life cycle analysis of the air quality impacts of BEVs, PHEVs, vs. conventional vehicles in the PJM Interconnection | Regional | Electricity dispatch model, Emissions inventory, Mobile emissions simulator | Reduced form |
| Razeghi et al. ( | Comparisons of 40% PHEV vs. BEV penetration baseline vs. increased wind energy, and controlled charging or not scenarios in California's South Coast Air Basin | Regional | Electricity dispatch model, Emissions inventory, Mobile emissions database | Full physics |
| U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ( | Co-benefits assessment of federal GHG emissions and fuel efficiency standards for medium- and heavy-duty vehicles | National | Emissions inventory | Full physics |
| Nopmongcol et al. ( | Air quality impacts of electrifying 17% light duty and 8% heavy duty VMT as well as 79% off-road equipment | National | Optimization tool, Mobile emissions simulator, Mobile emissions database | Full physics |
| Pan et al. ( | Comparison of moderate, aggressive, and complete EV scenarios in the Greater Houston Area | Metropolitan | Emissions inventory, Mobile emissions simulator | Full physics |
Figure 2Histogram of research included in literature review by publishing date. The table is color coded to specify the type of climate mitigation strategy or policy evaluated in the studies: green indicates climate policies, blue indicates electricity generation or renewable energy deployment or policy, and orange indicates transportation. A majority of the research included in this review was published in the last 5 years, with the oldest study dating 2003.
Scope and methods of electricity generation and renewable energy deployment co-benefits research.
| McCubbin and Sovacool ( | Evaluate the air quality benefits from deploying wind power in California and Idaho | Regional | Emissions inventory | Reduced form |
| Plachinski et al. ( | Current, expected, proposed EE/RE state WI policies | State | Capacity expansion model | Full physics |
| Buonocore et al. ( | Compare four scenarios: 500 MW wind, 500 MW solar, 500 MW reduced peak load, and 150 MW reduced baseload in six locations in the PJM Interconnection | Regional | Production cost model | Reduced form |
| Wiser et al. ( | Evaluate benefits of solar PV deployment of 14% in 2030 and 27% in 2050 | National | Capacity expansion model | Reduced form |
| Millstein et al. ( | Quantify co-benefits from actual 2007–2015 PV and wind deployment | National | Data and analysis tool | Reduced form |
| Abel et al. ( | 17% electricity generation replaced with PV in Eastern U.S. | Regional | Production cost model | Full physics |
| Abel et al. ( | 12% summertime baseload electricity demand reduction stemming from energy efficiency measures | National | Data and analysis tool | Full physics |
| Buonocore et al. ( | Scenarios of deploying 100–3,000 MW renewable energy (wind, utility solar PV, rooftop solar PV) in different U.S. regions | National | Data and analysis tool | Reduced form |
Table of models used in literature included in review.
| U.S. Regional Energy Policy | USREP | Computable general equilibrium model | MIT | ( |
| Haiku | Haiku | Capacity expansion model | Resources for the Future | ( |
| MyPower | MyPower | Meier engineering research | ( | |
| MARKet ALlocation | MARKAL | International energy agency | ( | |
| Regional energy deployment system | ReEDS | NREL | ( | |
| Integrated planning model | IPM | ICF | ( | |
| GridView | GridView | Production cost model | ABB | ( |
| AVoided emissions and geneRation Tool | AVERT | Data and analysis tool | U.S. EPA | ( |
| Greenhouse gases, regulated emissions, and energy use in transportation | GREET | Mobile emissions simulator | Argonne national laboratory | ( |
| MOtor vehicle emission simulator | MOVES | U.S. EPA | ( | |
| Community multiscale air quality | CMAQ | Full physics air quality model | U.S. EPA | ( |
| Comprehensive air quality model with extensions | CAMx | Ramboll environ | ( | |
| Weather Research and Forecasting coupled with Chemistry | WRF-Chem | NCAR | ( | |
| Tracking and analysis framework | TAF | Reduced form air quality model | U.S. DOE | ( |
| Air pollution emission experiments and policy analysis | APEEP/AP2 | N. Muller, Carnegie Mellon | ( | |
| CO–benefits risk assessment | COBRA | U.S. EPA | ( | |
| Electrical policy simulation tool for electrical grid intervention | EPSTEIN | J. Buonocore et al. Harvard | ( | |
| Estimating air pollution social impact using regression | EASIUR | J. Heo and P. Adams, Carnegie Mellon | ( | |
| Intervention model for air pollution | InMAP | C. Tessum, J. Hill, and J. Marshall | ( | |
| Environmental benefits mapping and analysis program | BenMAP | Health benefits model | U.S. EPA | ( |
Table includes type, developer, and studies used.
Figure 3Graph of the three studies that include air quality and public health co-benefits monetized as U.S. dollars per ton of CO2 ($/tCO2). These are reported from left to right by date of study (2010–2019). Nemet et al. (32)'s range of co-benefits value review is included as a comparison. All values have been adjusted for inflation to 2019 US$ (36, 74, 77).
Figure 4Graph of the five studies that include air quality and public health co-benefits monetized as cents per kWh (c/kWh) as well as levelized cost of energy (LCOE) for solar PV and onshore wind and U.S. average electricity costs in July 2018 (77, 81–83, 85).