Toxics (Mar 2023)

Impact of Stove Renovation on PM<sub>2.5</sub> Exposure, Risk Perception, Self-Protective Willingness of Rural Residents

  • Lei Huang,
  • Yuxin Liu,
  • Yangyang Wu,
  • Ziwen Ye,
  • Futian Ren,
  • Xinlei Liu,
  • Guofeng Shen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics11030245
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
p. 245

Abstract

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To improve household air quality, the Chinese government has launched a number of pilot stove renovation projects, but few studies have explored the impact of the project on people’s perception of and willingness to participate in these renovations; moreover, factors affecting willingness to pay for the project in rural China are not yet clear. We conducted a field measurement and a corresponding door-to-door questionnaire survey using the renovated group and the unrenovated group. The results showed that (1) the stove renovation project could not only reduce PM2.5 exposure and the excess mortality risk of rural residents, but also (2) improve residents’ risk perception and self-protective willingness. (3) Specifically, the project had a deeper impact on female and low-income residents. (4) Meanwhile, the higher the income and the larger family size, the higher the risk perception and self-protective willingness. (5) Furthermore, willingness to pay for the project was related with residents’ support for the project, benefit from renovation, income, and family size. Our results recommended that stove renovation policies should pay more attention to families with lower income and smaller size.

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