Abstract
The trichlorofluoromethane (CFC-11) emission from its production and use (PAU) has drawn widespread interest, while its combustion sources have been overlooked. This study identified CFC-11 emission factors (EFs) of 3.6, 3.2 and 0.025 mg kg-1 from the combustion of domestic chunk coal, honeycomb briquettes and coal-fired power plants, respectively. A multi-year (2000-2021) emission inventory of CFC-11 from coal combustion in China was established. Results indicated that the CFC-11 annual emission from coal combustion in China was, on average, 233.5 t yr-1. It exhibited fluctuations and maintained an overall upward trend, accounting for 0.8 % of PAU emissions in 2000 and increasing to 9.8 % in 2021, with the peak value appearing in 2016. In the Shandong and Hebei provinces, which have high coal consumption amounts, the CFC-11 emissions from coal combustion increased by approximately 74 % during 2014-2017 compared to 2011-2012. At the Gosan station close to the Chinese mainland, CFC-11 emitted from coal combustion in Hebei and Shandong was 0.5 ppt of its average concentration during January 2016. An additional climate effect of the clean heating and coal-to-electricity policies in China was also observed, with an obvious decrease (2.2 × 106 and 3.4 × 107 t) in CO2-equivalent emission. This study provides substantial evidence of CFC-11 emission from coal combustion and highlights the role of combustion emission against the background of reducing CFC-11 from PAU. The data compiled in this work can be found at 10.6084/m9.figshare.28523063 (Niu et al., 2025).
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CITATION STYLE
Niu, Z., Kong, S., Yan, Q., Cheng, Y., Zheng, H., Hu, Y., … Qi, S. (2025). Estimation of CFC-11 emissions from coal combustion in China. Earth System Science Data, 17(12), 6731–6746. https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-17-6731-2025
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