
China's Urban Methane Emissions From Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plant
Author(s) -
Zhao X.,
Jin X. K.,
Guo W.,
Zhang C.,
Shan Y. L.,
Du M. X.,
Tillotson M. R.,
Yang H.,
Liao X. W.,
Li Y. P.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
earth's future
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.641
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2328-4277
DOI - 10.1029/2018ef001113
Subject(s) - wastewater , per capita , environmental science , sewage treatment , environmental engineering , gross domestic product , china , environmental protection , agricultural economics , geography , population , economic growth , economics , demography , sociology , archaeology
The increased number and capacity of municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) in China has driven the emission of methane (CH 4 ). Few studies have focused on quantification of CH 4 emissions from municipal WWTPs of different cities and analysis of socioeconomic factors influencing the quantity of emissions. Here we estimated CH 4 emissions from WWTPs in China for 229 prefectural‐level cities, based on data from 2,019 working municipal WWTPs. The results show the total CH 4 emissions to be 1,169.8 thousand tons (29.2 MtCO 2 e) in 2014, which is over three times that of the municipal WWTPs in the United States in 2016. Large cities along the east coast regions had larger CH 4 emissions in absolute and per capita terms. Correlation analysis shows that cities with higher gross domestic product, household food consumption expenditure, or household consumption expenditure produced more degradable organics in wastewater, thus more CH 4 emissions. Measures to control the sources of degradable organics and regulate WWTP processes with less emission factor are key to mitigate CH 4 emissions. In addition to aerobic or anaerobic wastewater treatment systems, factors such as wastewater temperature, length of sewer, and the addition of nitrate that influencing emission factor are suggested to be involved in CH 4 emission modeling.