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Featured researches published by Xujia Jiang.


The Lancet | 2015

Health and climate change: policy responses to protect public health

Nick Watts; W. Neil Adger; Paolo Agnolucci; Jason Blackstock; Peter Byass; Wenjia Cai; Sarah Chaytor; Tim Colbourn; Matthew D. Collins; Adam Cooper; Peter M. Cox; Joanna Depledge; Paul Drummond; Paul Ekins; Victor Galaz; Delia Grace; Hilary Graham; Michael Grubb; Andy Haines; Ian Hamilton; Alasdair Hunter; Xujia Jiang; Moxuan Li; Ilan Kelman; Lu Liang; Melissa Lott; Robert Lowe; Yong Luo; Georgina M. Mace; Mark A. Maslin

The 2015 Lancet Commission on Health and Climate Change has been formed to map out the impacts of climate change, and the necessary policy responses, in order to ensure the highest attainable stand ...


Nature | 2017

Transboundary health impacts of transported global air pollution and international trade

Qiang Zhang; Xujia Jiang; Dan Tong; Steven J. Davis; Hongyan Zhao; Guannan Geng; Tong Feng; Bo Zheng; Zifeng Lu; David G. Streets; Ruijing Ni; Michael Brauer; Aaron van Donkelaar; Randall V. Martin; Hong Huo; Zhu Liu; Da Pan; Haidong Kan; Yingying Yan; Jintai Lin; Kebin He; Dabo Guan

Millions of people die every year from diseases caused by exposure to outdoor air pollution. Some studies have estimated premature mortality related to local sources of air pollution, but local air quality can also be affected by atmospheric transport of pollution from distant sources. International trade is contributing to the globalization of emission and pollution as a result of the production of goods (and their associated emissions) in one region for consumption in another region. The effects of international trade on air pollutant emissions, air quality and health have been investigated regionally, but a combined, global assessment of the health impacts related to international trade and the transport of atmospheric air pollution is lacking. Here we combine four global models to estimate premature mortality caused by fine particulate matter (PM2.5) pollution as a result of atmospheric transport and the production and consumption of goods and services in different world regions. We find that, of the 3.45 million premature deaths related to PM2.5 pollution in 2007 worldwide, about 12 per cent (411,100 deaths) were related to air pollutants emitted in a region of the world other than that in which the death occurred, and about 22 per cent (762,400 deaths) were associated with goods and services produced in one region for consumption in another. For example, PM2.5 pollution produced in China in 2007 is linked to more than 64,800 premature deaths in regions other than China, including more than 3,100 premature deaths in western Europe and the USA; on the other hand, consumption in western Europe and the USA is linked to more than 108,600 premature deaths in China. Our results reveal that the transboundary health impacts of PM2.5 pollution associated with international trade are greater than those associated with long-distance atmospheric pollutant transport.


Environmental Research Letters | 2015

Satellite measurements oversee China’s sulfur dioxide emission reductions from coal-fired power plants

Siwen Wang; Qiang Zhang; Randall V. Martin; Sajeev Philip; Fei Liu; Meng Li; Xujia Jiang; Kebin He

To evaluate the real reductions in sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions from coal-fired power plants in China, Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) remote sensing SO2 columns were used to inversely model the SO2 emission burdens surrounding 26 isolated power plants before and after the effective operation of their flue gas desulfurization (FGD) facilities. An improved two-dimensional Gaussian fitting method was developed to estimate SO2 burdens under complex background conditions, by using the accurate local background columns and the customized fitting domains for each target source. The OMI-derived SO2 burdens before effective FGD operation were correlated well with the bottom-up emission estimates (R = 0.92), showing the reliability of the OMI-derived SO2 burdens as a linear indicator of the associated source strength. OMI observations indicated that the average lag time period between installation and effective operation of FGD facilities at these 26 power plants was around 2 years, and no FGD facilities have actually operated before the year 2008. The OMI estimated average SO2 removal equivalence (56.0%) was substantially lower than the official report (74.6%) for these 26 power plants. Therefore, it has been concluded that the real reductions of SO2 emissions in China associated with the FGD facilities at coal-fired power plants were considerably diminished in the context of the current weak supervision measures.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2015

Revealing the Hidden Health Costs Embodied in Chinese Exports

Xujia Jiang; Qiang Zhang; Hongyan Zhao; Guannan Geng; Liqun Peng; Dabo Guan; Haidong Kan; Hong Huo; Jintai Lin; Michael Brauer; Randall V. Martin; Kebin He

China emits a considerable amount of air pollutants when producing goods for export. Previous efforts have emphasized the magnitude of export-related emissions; however, their health consequences on the Chinese population have not been quantified. Here, we present an interdisciplinary study to estimate the health impact of export-related air pollution. The results show that export-related emissions elevated the annual mean population weighted PM2.5 by 8.3 μg/m(3) (15% of the total) in 2007, causing 157,000 deaths and accounting for 12% of the total mortality attributable to PM2.5-related air pollution. Compared to the eastern coastal provinces, the inner regions experience much larger export-related health losses relative to their economic production gains, owing to huge inter-regional disparities in export structures and technology levels. A shift away from emission-intensive production structure and export patterns, especially in inner regions, could significantly help improve national exports while alleviating the inter-regional cost-benefit inequality. Our results provide the first quantification of health consequences from air pollution related to Chinese exports. The proposed policy recommendations, based on health burden, economic production gains, and emission analysis, would be helpful to develop more sustainable and effective national and regional export strategies.


Remote Sensing | 2017

Fusing Observational, Satellite Remote Sensing and Air Quality Model Simulated Data to Estimate Spatiotemporal Variations of PM2.5 Exposure in China

Tao Xue; Yixuan Zheng; Guannan Geng; Bo Zheng; Xujia Jiang; Qiang Zhang; Kebin He

Estimating ground surface PM2.5 with fine spatiotemporal resolution is a critical technique for exposure assessments in epidemiological studies of its health risks. Previous studies have utilized monitoring, satellite remote sensing or air quality modeling data to evaluate the spatiotemporal variations of PM2.5 concentrations, but such studies rarely combined these data simultaneously. Through assembling techniques, including linear mixed effect regressions with a spatial-varying coefficient, a maximum likelihood estimator and the spatiotemporal Kriging together, we develop a three-stage model to fuse PM2.5 monitoring data, satellite-derived aerosol optical depth (AOD) and community multi-scale air quality (CMAQ) simulations together and apply it to estimate daily PM2.5 at a spatial resolution of 0.1° over China. Performance of the three-stage model is evaluated using a cross-validation (CV) method step by step. CV results show that the finally fused estimator of PM2.5 is in good agreement with the observational data (RMSE = 23.0 μg/m3 and R2 = 0.72) and outperforms either AOD-derived PM2.5 (R2 = 0.62) or CMAQ simulations (R2 = 0.51). According to step-specific CVs, in data fusion, AOD-derived PM2.5 plays a key role to reduce mean bias, whereas CMAQ provides spatiotemporally complete predictions, which avoids sampling bias caused by non-random incompleteness in satellite-derived AOD. Our fused products are more capable than either CMAQ simulations or AOD-based estimates in characterizing the polluting procedure during haze episodes and thus can support both chronic and acute exposure assessments of ambient PM2.5. Based on the products, averaged concentration of annual exposure to PM2.5 was 55.7 μg/m3, while averaged count of polluted days (PM2.5 > 75 μg/m3) was 81 across China during 2014. Fused estimates will be publicly available for future health-related studies.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

MIX: a mosaic Asian anthropogenic emission inventory under the international collaboration framework of the MICS-Asia and HTAP

Meng Li; Qiang Zhang; Jun-ichi Kurokawa; Jung Hun Woo; Kebin He; Zifeng Lu; Toshimasa Ohara; Yu Song; David G. Streets; Gregory R. Carmichael; Yafang Cheng; Chaopeng Hong; Hong Huo; Xujia Jiang; Sicong Kang; Fei Liu; Hang Su; Bo Zheng


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011

Characteristics of atmospheric ammonia over Beijing, China

Zhaoyang Meng; Weili Lin; Xujia Jiang; P. Yan; Yuesi Wang; Y. M. Zhang; X. F. Jia


Atmospheric Environment | 2007

Characteristics and sources of PM2.5 and carbonaceous species during winter in Taiyuan, China

Zhaoyang Meng; Xujia Jiang; P. Yan; Weili Lin; H.D. Zhang; Yuesi Wang


Atmospheric Environment | 2016

Assessment of socioeconomic costs to China’s air pollution

Yang Xia; Dabo Guan; Xujia Jiang; Liqun Peng; Heike Schroeder; Qiang Zhang


Nature Geoscience | 2016

Global climate forcing of aerosols embodied in international trade

Jintai Lin; Dan Tong; Steven J. Davis; Ruijing Ni; Xiaoxiao Tan; Da Pan; Hongyan Zhao; Zifeng Lu; David G. Streets; Tong Feng; Qiang Zhang; Yingying Yan; Yongyun Hu; Jing Li; Zhu Liu; Xujia Jiang; Guannan Geng; Kebin He; Yi Huang; Dabo Guan

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Dabo Guan

University of East Anglia

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David G. Streets

Argonne National Laboratory

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