Aviation
emissions' impacts on air quality larger than on climate, study finds
IOP Publishing
Climate activist Greta Thunberg condemns air travel for its harm to the environment. New MIT research shows she is right. |
The MIT team found that growth in
aviation causes twice as much damage to air quality as to the climate.
Writing today in IOP
Publishing's Environmental Research Letters, they examine how this
damage can be mitigated, and provide consistent comparative assessments of
aviation emissions trade-offs, considering both climate and air quality
impacts.
The lead researcher on the study, Dr
Sebastian Eastham, from the Laboratory for Aviation and the Environment in
MIT's Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, said: "Aviation
emissions are an increasingly significant contributor to anthropogenic climate
change. They cause five per cent of global climate forcing.
"When you consider the full
flight, which includes emissions from takeoff, cruise and landing, aircraft
emissions are also responsible for around 16,000 premature deaths a year from
impaired air quality. This is small compared to other sectors, being only
around 0.4% of the total deaths attributed annually to global air quality
degradation, but is often overlooked in policy analysis."
"The challenges for aviation
sector decision makers wanting to reduce these impacts are the trade-offs
between different emission types, and their impacts in different
locations."
Historically, attempts to address the climate and air quality impacts from aviation have been through changes in policy, technology, and/or operations -- improvements to fuel efficiency; more stringent emissions standards; market-based measures to reduce CO2 emissions; or the introduction of sustainable aviation fuels.
But the study notes reducing one
type of emission can come at the cost of increasing another, either in absolute
terms or by limiting potential reductions offered by new technology.
Dr Eastham explained: "We could
decrease NOx emissions by designing engines with lower
combustor temperatures. However, the resulting loss in thermodynamic efficiency
would mean we need to burn more fuel, meaning more CO2. These are
the types of trade-offs that need to be quantified, and our study offers a fast
way for decision makers to do this.
"We developed a set of metrics
for comparing the climate and air quality impacts of aviation emissions at all
flights stages, by estimating the social costs per unit of emitted pollutant.
The cost metrics are broken down by flight phase -- cruise, landing and
take-off -- and by the geographical region of emission, both per kg of emission
and per kg of fuel burn."
The research team applied the
metrics to evaluate the effects of a global expansion in aviation, consistent
in magnitude with its current annual growth. They then used this as a benchmark
for three scenarios.
First, they considered a growth
scenario with fuel efficiency increases and reductions in NOx emissions
factors consistent with 10-year goals. Second, they evaluated the trade-offs
between the climate and air quality impacts of engine-based NOx emissions
reductions. Finally, they re-assessed the climate and air quality trade-offs of
jet fuel desulphurisation.
Dr Eastham said: "Our results
show three components are responsible for 97 per cent of climate and air
quality damages per unit aviation fuel burn: air quality impacts of NOx at
58 per cent; climate impacts of CO2 at 25 per cent; and climate
impacts of contrails at 14 per cent. It is important to note that the vast
majority, around 86 per cent in fact, of the NOx impacts on air
quality are due to the emissions from cruise as opposed to the landing and
takeoff cycle. These components -- cruise NOx emissions, CO2 emissions,
and contrails -- are therefore primary targets for future strategies to reduce
the atmospheric impacts of aviation emissions.
"To reduce the climate impacts
of aviation, measures aimed at reducing CO2 emissions and
contrails are likely to have the greatest net climate benefit. In contrast, we
found that 94 per cent of air quality impacts are driven by NOx.
This suggests that measures aimed at reducing NOx emissions
during cruise could lead to the greatest net benefits, even if they cause a
small but uncertain climate NOx disbenefit and a small decrease
in fuel efficiency.
"Finally, we found the air
quality impacts of aviation emissions significantly exceed the climate impacts,
with air quality impacts being 1.7 to 4.4 times higher than the climate impact
per unit of fuel burn. This must be contrasted to ground-based industries,
where post-combustion emissions control and access to cleaner fuels is
widespread. For example, the climate impacts of the US power sector are of
similar magnitude as the air quality impacts following significant declines in
co-pollutant emissions over the past 15 years. This points towards potential
political and technological opportunities for reducing the atmospheric impacts
of the aviation sector."