Large Point Source (LPS) emissions from India: regional and sectoral analysis, atmospheric environment
View/ Open
Date
2001-10-18Author
Garg, Amit
Kapshe, M.
Shukla, P. R.
Ghosh, Diptesh
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Indian large point sources (LPS) contribute to CO2 andSO2 emissions to a large extent (above 65%) andto CH4,
N2O andNOX emissions to some extent (around10%). The former emissions are primarily from fossil fuel combustion
while the latter have agriculture sector dominance, explaining the drastic difference in LPS contributions to all India
emissions. The present paper covers 509 LPS for India. These are well distributed across the country. However, there
are some regions of very few LPS (like the western desert and the hilly areas of north, northeast and coastal west) and
some regions of high LPS concentration (Mumbai–Ahmedabad corridor, Delhi and near coal mine mouths). There is a
dominance of power plants in Indian LPS emissions for CO2 andSO2 (47% each), with cement (9% and5%) andsteel
(6% and7%) plants being the other major contributors. Moreover, due to growing population, increasing urbanization
andhigher consumption levels, these LPS emissions are growing much faster than the national average. The present
analysis wouldbe useful for policy-making to mitigate these pollutants andtheir associatedimpacts.
Collections
- Journal Articles [3738]