Back to Search Start Over

Intensive carbon dioxide emission of coal chemical industry in China.

Authors :
Zhang, You
Yuan, Zengwei
Margni, Manuele
Bulle, Cécile
Hua, Hui
Jiang, Songyan
Liu, Xuewei
Source :
Applied Energy. Feb2019, Vol. 236, p540-550. 11p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Highlights • Local CO 2 emission factors of China's coal chemical products are published. • The total CO 2 emission from China's coal chemical industry was 607 Mt in 2015. • The spatial disparity of CO 2 emission from China's coal chemical industry is great. • CO 2 emission from modern coal chemical industry is predicted to be 417 Mt in 2020. • Carbon capture, utilization, and storage has great potential to reduce its emission. Abstract As the largest producer of coal chemical products in the world, China faces tremendous pressure to reduce its carbon emission. An accurate quantification of the carbon dioxide (CO 2) emission of coal chemical industry in China is therefore necessary. However, due to the variety of coal chemical products and limitations of CO 2 emission factors, the total CO 2 emission of coal chemical industry has yet to be determined. In this study, local CO 2 emission factors of coal chemical products in China are published based on first hand data from twenty-three coal chemical enterprises and the total CO 2 emission of China's coal chemical industry is extrapolated. The provincial-level spatial distribution of the CO 2 emission of coal chemical industry is presented to assist the government in identifying key emission reduction areas. Additionally, scenario analysis of CO 2 emission for China's modern coal chemical industry in 2020 is conducted to determine whether the development of the modern coal chemical industry will have a significant impact on future CO 2 emission, as well as the effect of carbon capture, utilization and storage technologies on the reduction in carbon emission. The estimate shows that the total CO 2 emission of the coal chemical industry in 2015 was 607 million tonnes (Mt), accounting for approximately 5.71% of China's total CO 2 emission. The figure is higher than the total annual CO 2 emission of a country such as Canada (555 Mt) or Brazil (486 Mt). Quantifying the emission of the coal chemical industry is therefore critical to understand the global carbon budget. The spatial distribution shows that Shandong, Inner Mongolia and Shanxi release one-third of the coal chemical industry's total CO 2 emission. Considering the development of the modern coal chemical industry, its CO 2 emission is predicted to be as high as 416.52 million tonnes in 2020. However, the CO 2 emission could be reduced by 317.98 million tonnes when carbon capture, utilization and storage are applied to process and energy systems simultaneously. This paper quantifies the CO 2 emission of the coal chemical industry in China for the first time, identifies key chemical products and the provinces in which they are produced, explores the carbon reduction potential by scenario analysis, and provides specific data to support the assessment of effective CO 2 reduction policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03062619
Volume :
236
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Applied Energy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
134228065
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2018.12.022