Published: 12:38, December 7, 2020 | Updated: 08:58, June 5, 2023
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China's measures to curb emissions have potential, journal reports
By Hou Liqiang

China's efforts to realize net zero carbon dioxide emissions show enormous potential in helping alleviate negative health effects caused by air pollution and climate change, according to a report by medical journal Lancet on Thursday.

"Health effects from climate change in China are accelerating, posing an unacceptably high amount of health risk if global temperatures continue to rise," reads the report, the first of its kind by the journal on the links between health and climate change in China.

The enormous potential for improving public health in the immediate and near term by tackling climate change can already be detected in the effects of policy shifts.

Lancet

According to the report, unveiled by the Lancet Countdown Center for Asia, headquartered at Tsinghua University in Beijing, heat wave-related mortality quadrupled from 1990 to 2019, causing 26,800 deaths last year.

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Compared to the early 2000s, people aged 65 or above endured an average of 13 more heat wave days in 2019, according to the report.

For outdoor workers, their potential labor productivity loss caused by heat reached 0.5 percent of the total national working hours. That is about 1 percent of the nation's GDP, equivalent to its annual fiscal expenditure on science and technology.

According to the report, however, by aligning pandemic recovery and climate plans with the country's pledge to achieve carbon neutrality by 2060, China can protect public health, promote economic sustainability and also preserve the planet.

"The enormous potential for improving public health in the immediate and near term by tackling climate change can already be detected in the effects of policy shifts," reads the report.

READ MORE: Green path to achieve peak emission level

The journal said a reduction in coal used in China's total primary energy supply amid surging investment in renewable energy has helped the nation reduce the annual average density of PM2.5-tiny particulate matter that is hazardous to health-by 28 percent in the country's urban areas from 2015 to 2019, which has led to 90,000 fewer deaths annually.

These gains are only a glimpse of what is possible, it said, as coal still represents 59 percent of the total primary energy supply in China, and 42 percent of the country's population still live in areas that don't meet the World Health Organization's standards for air pollution, according to the report.

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According to the WHO's guideline, PM2.5's annual mean concentrations should not exceed 10 micrograms per cubic meter. The average density of the particulate matter in China, however, stood at 36 mcg/cubic m last year.

The report makes it clear that while there is positive development in China, the nation still needs to scale up its climate efforts to address the challenge ahead, said Cai Wenjia, associate professor with Tsinghua's Department of Earth System Science.

Cai, also co-director of Lancet Countdown Center for Asia, suggests that China take the health effects from climate change into consideration as it drafts the road map to peak carbon emissions before 2030 and realize net zero carbon dioxide emissions before 2060.

houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn