Nature Communications (Oct 2023)

Achieving health-oriented air pollution control requires integrating unequal toxicities of industrial particles

  • Di Wu,
  • Haotian Zheng,
  • Qing Li,
  • Shuxiao Wang,
  • Bin Zhao,
  • Ling Jin,
  • Rui Lyu,
  • Shengyue Li,
  • Yuzhe Liu,
  • Xiu Chen,
  • Fenfen Zhang,
  • Qingru Wu,
  • Tonghao Liu,
  • Jingkun Jiang,
  • Lin Wang,
  • Xiangdong Li,
  • Jianmin Chen,
  • Jiming Hao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-42089-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Protecting human health from fine particulate matter (PM) pollution is the ambitious goal of clean air actions, but current control strategies largely ignore the role of source-specific PM toxicity. Here, we proposed health-oriented control strategies by integrating the unequal toxic potencies of the most polluting industrial PMs. Iron and steel industry (ISI)-emitted PM2.5 exhibit about one order of magnitude higher toxic potency than those of cement and power industries. Compared with the current mass-based control strategy (prioritizing implementation of ultralow emission standards in the power sector), the proposed health-oriented control strategy (priority control of the ISI sector) could generate 5.4 times higher reduction in population-weighted toxic potency-adjusted PM2.5 exposure among polluting industries in China. Furthermore, the marginal abatement cost per unit of toxic potency-adjusted mass of ISI-emitted PM2.5 is only a quarter of that of the other two sectors under ultralow emission scenarios. We highlight that a health-oriented air pollution control strategy is urgently required to achieve cost-effective reductions in particulate exposure risks.