柴油
氮氧化物
环境科学
微粒
柴油机排气
臭氧
空气污染
温室气体
空气质量指数
环境保护
欧洲联盟
环境工程
废物管理
自然资源经济学
业务
工程类
气象学
化学
地理
国际贸易
燃烧
有机化学
经济
生物
生态学
作者
Susan C. Anenberg,Joshua Miller,Ray Minjares,Li Du,Daven K. Henze,Forrest Lacey,Christopher S. Malley,Lisa Emberson,Vicente Franco,Zbigniew Klimont,C. Heyes
出处
期刊:Nature
[Nature Portfolio]
日期:2017-05-01
卷期号:545 (7655): 467-471
被引量:715
摘要
Vehicle emissions contribute to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and tropospheric ozone air pollution, affecting human health, crop yields and climate worldwide. On-road diesel vehicles produce approximately 20 per cent of global anthropogenic emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx), which are key PM2.5 and ozone precursors. Regulated NOx emission limits in leading markets have been progressively tightened, but current diesel vehicles emit far more NOx under real-world operating conditions than during laboratory certification testing. Here we show that across 11 markets, representing approximately 80 per cent of global diesel vehicle sales, nearly one-third of on-road heavy-duty diesel vehicle emissions and over half of on-road light-duty diesel vehicle emissions are in excess of certification limits. These excess emissions (totalling 4.6 million tons) are associated with about 38,000 PM2.5- and ozone-related premature deaths globally in 2015, including about 10 per cent of all ozone-related premature deaths in the 28 European Union member states. Heavy-duty vehicles are the dominant contributor to excess diesel NOx emissions and associated health impacts in almost all regions. Adopting and enforcing next-generation standards (more stringent than Euro 6/VI) could nearly eliminate real-world diesel-related NOx emissions in these markets, avoiding approximately 174,000 global PM2.5- and ozone-related premature deaths in 2040. Most of these benefits can be achieved by implementing Euro VI standards where they have not yet been adopted for heavy-duty vehicles.
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