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Impacts and mitigation of excess diesel-related NO x emissions in 11 major vehicle markets

  • Susan C. Anenberg
  • , Joshua Miller
  • , Ray Minjares
  • , Li Du
  • , Daven K. Henze
  • , Forrest Lacey
  • , Christopher S. Malley
  • , Lisa Emberson
  • , Vicente Franco
  • , Zbigniew Klimont
  • , Chris Heyes
  • Environmental Health Analytics, LLC
  • International Council on Clean Transportation
  • University of Colorado Boulder
  • University of York
  • European Commission
  • International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Laxenburg

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

668 Scopus citations

Abstract

Vehicle emissions contribute to fine particulate matter (PM 2.5) 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 (NO x), which are key PM 2.5 and ozone precursors. Regulated NO x emission limits in leading markets have been progressively tightened, but current diesel vehicles emit far more NO x 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 PM 2.5 - 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 NO x 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 NO x emissions in these markets, avoiding approximately 174,000 global PM 2.5 - 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.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)467-471
Number of pages5
JournalNature
Volume545
Issue number7655
DOIs
StatePublished - May 25 2017

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