Journal:
In: United Nations Development Program. World Energy Assessment. UNDP, New York.
Year:
2000
Publication Keywords:
Abstract:
In this chapter, the principal environmental
and health impacts of energy
are discussed according to the scale at which
they occur. About half of the world’s households
use solid fuels (biomass and coal) for cooking
and heating in simple devices that produce
large amounts of air pollution—pollution that is
probably responsible for 4–5 percent of the
global burden of disease. The chief ecosystem
impacts relate to charcoal production and
fuelwood harvesting.
At the workplace scale, solid-fuel fuel cycles
create significant risks for workers and have
the largest impacts on populations among
energy systems. In communities, fuel use is
the main cause of urban air pollution, though
there is substantial variation among cities in
the relative contributions of vehicles and
stationary sources. Diesel-fuelled vehicles,
which are more prominent in developing
countries, pose a growing challenge for urban
health. The chief ecosystem impacts result
from large-scale hydropower projects in
orests, although surface mining causes significant
damage in some areas.
At the regional scale, fine particles and
ozone are the most widespread health damaging
pollutants from energy use, and can
extend hundreds of kilometres from their
sources. Similarly, nitrogen and sulphur
emissions lead to acid deposition far from
their sources. Such deposition is associated
with damage to forests, soils, and lakes in
various parts of the world. At the global scale,
energy systems account for two-thirds of
human-generated greenhouse gas increases.
Thus energy use is the human activity
most closely linked to potential climate
change. Climate change is feared to have
significant direct impacts on human health
and on ecosystems.
There are important opportunities for ‘no
regrets’ strategies that achieve benefits at more
than one scale. For example, if greenhouse gas
controls are targeted to reduce solid fuel use
in households and other energy systems with
large health impacts (such as vehicle fleets),
significant improvements can occur at the
local, community, regional, and global scales. ■