4.7 Article

Decomposition analysis of PM2.5 emissions based on LMDI and Tapio decoupling model: study of Hunan and Guangdong

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 32, Pages 43443-43458

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-13819-4

Keywords

PM2.5; LMDI model; Tapio decoupling; Energy consumption

Funding

  1. National Social Science Foundation of China [20CJY064]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [NSFC71974125, NSFC71661137004]
  3. Philosophy and Social Science Planning Project of Henan Province, China [2018BJJ062]
  4. Major Projects of Philosophy and Social Science Research of Hubei Province [19ZD044]

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This study quantitatively analyzes the PM2.5 emissions in Hunan and Guangdong provinces, finding significant differences in emission levels, contribution rates, and decoupling between the two provinces.
This paper takes energy consumption PM2.5 emission as research object, and quantitatively analyzes the PM2.5 emission level in Hunan and Guangdong provinces from 2012 to 2017. We build a PM2.5 emission decomposition model divided by five sectors, including industry, transportation, construction, resident, and other, and use attribution method and Tapio decoupling index to analyze the relationship between economic development and PM2.5 emission level. The results show that (1) the difference in PM2.5 emissions between the two provinces appeared in 2015; (2) the contribution rate of total PM2.5 emissions is 83.1%, and coal consumption is the determine factor of PM2.5 emissions; industry is the main source of sector contribution with rate of 70.91%; (3) Guangdong's pollution control capacity is much higher than that of Hunan, while Hunan's PM2.5 marginal emission-reduction potential is much higher than that of Guangdong; (4) economic growth is the first increasing emission reason of PM2.5 emission changes, while the intensity of industrial energy consumption is the first reduction emission reason; (5) there is a big difference between the economic development of the two provinces and the decoupling of PM2.5 pollution.

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