4.6 Article

Air pollution health burden embodied in China's supply chains

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ese.2023.100264

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China; Air pollution; Mortality; Trade; Supply chain

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Product trade plays a crucial role in redistributing production and associated air pollution impacts among different sectors and regions. However, there is a lack of a comprehensive understanding of how air pollution is redistributed through trade chains, which hampers targeted clean air cooperation. In this study, we used multiple models to track the premature deaths related to PM2.5 along supply chains in China. Our findings reveal the key sectors and regions that contribute to PM2.5-related mortality from both a production and consumption perspective, and emphasize the importance of cross-boundary effects and capital investment in driving air pollution transfer.
Product trade plays an increasing role in relocating production and the associated air pollution impact among sectors and regions. While a comprehensive depiction of atmospheric pollution redistribution through trade chains is missing, which may hinder targeted clean air cooperation among sectors and regions. Here, we combined five state-of-the-art models from physics, economy, and epidemiology to track the anthropogenic fine particle matters (PM2.5) related premature mortality along the supply chains within China in 2017. Our results highlight the key sectors that affect PM2.5-related mortality from both production and consumption perspectives. The consumption-based effects from food, light industry, equipment, construction, and services sectors, caused 2-22 times higher deaths than those from a production perspective and totally contributed 63% of the national total. From a cross-boundary perspective, 25.7% of China's PM2.5-related deaths were caused by interprovincial trade, with the largest transfer occurring from the central and northern regions to well-developed east coast provinces. Capital investment dominated the cross-boundary effect (56% of the total) by involving substantial equipment and construction products, which greatly rely on product exports from regions with specific resources. This supply chain-based analysis provides a comprehensive quantification and may inform more effective joint-control efforts among associated regions and sectors from a health risk perspective. ?? 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of Chinese Society for Environmental Sciences, Harbin Institute of Technology, Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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