Sunset behind industrial area with stack emitting pollutants

Health Impacts of Ambient PM2.5 Pollution in China

Learn about PM2.5 trends and attributable mortality in China, future health and economic burdens under various future scenarios, as well as how China’s carbon emission targets with clean air policies impact these trends.

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Date/time
29 May 2025 12:00pm - 29 May 2025 12:30pm
person Speaker

Speakers

Lei Wan
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Description

China’s rapid industrialization and urbanization have led to some of the worst air pollution, with fine particulate matter (PM2.5) posing serious threats to population health. Over the past two decades, China has applied stringent air pollution control measures and policies to enhance air quality and has also committed to ambitious climate goals, such as peaking carbon emissions by 2030 and achieving net zero emissions by 2060. However, China’s large and aging population, coal-dominated energy structure, and manufacturing-driven economic structure pose significant challenges to future air quality improvements.

Against this background, this thesis has assessed historical trends of PM2.5 attributable mortality in China, explored the impact of population aging on attributable mortality, and projected future PM2.5 attributable health and economic burden under various scenarios, integrating China’s carbon emission targets with clean air policies. The thesis contains three major studies: Study 1 provided a comprehensive assessment of historical trends in mortality attributable to ambient PM2.5 exposure in China. It incorporated the newly developed Fusion relative risk model with updated cause-specific baseline mortality rates from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) 2021 study, offering a more accurate evaluation of PM2.5 related mortality and highlighting significant regional disparities. Study 2 assessed China’s age- and cause- specific mortality from PM2.5 based on high-resolution demographic data and adopted a decomposition method to assess the impact of different underlying factors that influence the trends in PM2.5 related mortality in the past and future, with a focus on population aging. Study 3 projected future PM2.5 related mortality and years of life lost (YLL) across 31 provinces in China from 2020 to 2060, under four scenarios combining local air pollution control with different climate policies. The study further evaluated economic costs using two metrics - value of a statistical life (VSL) and value per statistical life year (VSLY). The findings of this thesis offer critical implications for policymaking in China and provide broader lessons for countries facing similar challenges of addressing air pollution and related health impacts amid rapid population aging, urbanization, and the pursuit of ambitious climate goals.

Speaker: Lei Wan

Lei Wan is an MPhil student at ANU National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health (NCEPH). She holds a Master of Environmental Engineering degree and had worked as a research assistant in several projects on economic and environmental consulting before commencing her research program at NCEPH. Her research interests include the health effects of air pollution, climate change and health, and environmental sustainability.

Location

Bob Douglas Lecture Theatre, National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Building 62A Australian National University.

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