4.6 Article

Indoor air pollution from solid biomass fuels combustion in rural agricultural area of Tibet, China

Journal

INDOOR AIR
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages 198-205

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0668.2008.00579.x

Keywords

Indoor air pollution; Solid biomass fuel; Rural area; Interventions; Tibet

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [20677011]

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In this study, we are trying to investigate the indoor air pollution and to estimate the residents' pollution exposure reduction of energy altering in rural Tibet. Daily PM2.5 monitoring was conducted in indoor microenvironments like kitchen, living-room, bedroom, and yard in rural Tibet from December 2006 to March 2007. For kitchen air pollution, impact of two fuel types, methane and solid biomass fuels (SBFs), were compared. Questionnaire survey on the domestic energy pattern and residents' daily activity pattern was performed in Zha-nang County. Daily average PM2.5 concentrations in kitchen, living-room, bedroom, and yard were 134.91 mu g/m(3) (mean, n = 45, 95%CI 84.02, 185.80), 103.61 mu g/m(3) (mean, n = 21, 95%CI 85.77, 121.45), 76.13 mu g/m(3) (mean, n = 18, 95%CI 57.22, 95.04), and 78.33 mu g/m(3) (mean, n = 34, 95%CI 60.00, 96.65) respectively. Using SBFs in kitchen resulted in higher indoor pollution than using methane. PM2.5 concentrations in kitchen with dung cake, fuel wood and methane use were 117.41 mu g/m(3) (mean, n = 18, 95%CI 71.03, 163.79), 271.11 mu g/m(3) (mean, n = 12, 95%CI 104.74, 437.48), and 46.96 mu g/m(3) (mean, n = 15, 95%CI 28.10, 65.82) respectively. Family income has significant influence on cooking energy choice, while the lack of commercial energy supply affects the energy choice for heating more. The effects of two countermeasures to improve indoor air quality were estimated in this research. One is to replace SBFs by clean energy like methane, the other is to separate the cooking place from other rooms and by applying these countermeasures, residents' exposure to particulate matters would reduce by 25-50% (methane) or 20-30% (separation) compared to the present situation.Indoor air pollution caused by solid biomass fuels is one of the most important burdens of disease in the developing countries, which attracts the attention of environment and public health researchers, as well as policy makers. This paper gives a pilot research on the indoor air pollution and estimated the effects of some intervention policies in Tibet of China, where the living habits of the residents are quite different from other parts of the world. This work would be an important supply to the indoor air pollution studies, and would be helpful in policy making.

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