4.7 Article

A high-resolution nutrient emission inventory for hotspot identification in the Yangtze River Basin

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 321, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115847

Keywords

Hotspot analysis; Nutrient emission inventory; 0; 1? grid; County scale; Yangtze river basin

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52111540216, 51721006, 42142047]
  2. Open Fund Project of Yunnan Key Laboratory of Pollution Process and Management of Plateau Lake Watershed
  3. International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
  4. 2021 Young Scientists Summer Program fellowship

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A high-resolution nutrient emission inventory is crucial for identifying priority control areas for water quality restoration. However, the current inventories used in large-scale modeling lack localized parameters and characteristics when converting provincial scale inputs to finer scales.
A high-resolution nutrient emission inventory can provide reliable and accurate identification of priority control areas, which is crucial for efficient decisions on water quality restoration. However, the inventories widely used in large-scale modeling are usually based on provincial inputs, which induce the challenges of lacking localized parameters and missing localized characteristic when provincial scale inputs are converted to finer scales with the down-scale methods. Based on elaborate investigations and statistical data at the county scale with multi -scale data conversion, the China Emission Inventory of Nutrients (CEIN) was developed with a spatial resolu-tion of a 0.1 grid and sub-basin scales. The Yangtze River Basin was used as a case study to illustrate the po-tential applications of CEIN. The emissions of total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP) of Yangtze River Basin is 0.43 Mt and 0.04 Mt for point sources, 11.09 Mt and 4.64 Mt for diffuse sources in 2017. The hotspot analysis for 2606 sub-basins indicated that cropland is the key source of nutrient emissions, accounting for 58.88% and 79.15% of TN and TP, respectively. Industrial sewage and freshwater aquaculture accounted for 27.39% (TN) and 21.98% (TP) of the point sources, which is substantial due to their direct discharge into surface waters. The current results also reveal that, in contrast to CEIN, the previously used common emission factors based on GDP per capita produced considerable overestimations of 2.37 and 2.65 times the actual TN and TP emissions, respectively. Additional advantages of the CEIN have been demonstrated in identifying priority control areas more accurately with reduced bias and quantifying the effects of policies at much smaller scales. For example, the CEIN helps to distinguish hotspots, which was neglected when identifying sources at the level -III sub-basin scale, and indicates that the management of fractional areas (TN: 16.97%; TP: 13.44%) provides the highest nutrient emissions control (TN: 44.34%; TP: 48.65%) for the entire basin. The evaluation of China's toilet revolution policy demonstrates that achieving equitable access to safe sanitation has resulted in a reduction of 7240 t of TN and 833 t of TP, which is extremely critical for rural water quality and health.

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