Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2024)

Air quality and public health co-benefits of 100% renewable electricity adoption and electrification pathways in Los Angeles

  • Yun Li,
  • Vikram Ravi,
  • Garvin Heath,
  • Jiachen Zhang,
  • Pouya Vahmani,
  • Sang-Mi Lee,
  • Xinqiu Zhang,
  • Kelly T Sanders,
  • George A Ban-Weiss

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ad24cc
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 3
p. 034015

Abstract

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To demonstrate how a mega city can lead in decarbonizing beyond legal mandates, the city of Los Angeles (LA) developed science-based, feasible pathways towards utilizing 100% renewable energy for its municipally-owned electric utility. Aside from decarbonization, renewable energy adoption can lead to co-benefits such as improving urban air quality from reductions in combustion-related emissions of oxides of nitrogen (NO _x ), primary fine particulate matter (PM _2.5 ) and others. Herein, we quantify changes to air pollutant concentrations and public health from scenarios of 100% renewable electricity adoption in LA in 2045, alongside aggressive electrification of end-use sectors. Our analysis suggests that while ensuring reliable electricity supply, reductions in emissions of air pollutants associated with the 100% renewable electricity scenarios can lead to 8% citywide reductions of PM _2.5 concentration while increasing ozone concentration by 5% relative to a 2012 baseline year, given identical meteorology conditions. The combination of these concentration changes could result in net monetized public health benefits (driven by avoided deaths) of up to $1.4 billion in year 2045 in LA, results potentially replicable for other city-scale decarbonization scenarios.

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