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      ReCiPe2016: a harmonised life cycle impact assessment method at midpoint and endpoint level

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          USEtox—the UNEP-SETAC toxicity model: recommended characterisation factors for human toxicity and freshwater ecotoxicity in life cycle impact assessment

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            Addressing Global Mortality from Ambient PM2.5.

            Ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) has a large and well-documented global burden of disease. Our analysis uses high-resolution (10 km, global-coverage) concentration data and cause-specific integrated exposure-response (IER) functions developed for the Global Burden of Disease 2010 to assess how regional and global improvements in ambient air quality could reduce attributable mortality from PM2.5. Overall, an aggressive global program of PM2.5 mitigation in line with WHO interim guidelines could avoid 750 000 (23%) of the 3.2 million deaths per year currently (ca. 2010) attributable to ambient PM2.5. Modest improvements in PM2.5 in relatively clean regions (North America, Europe) would result in surprisingly large avoided mortality, owing to demographic factors and the nonlinear concentration-response relationship that describes the risk of particulate matter in relation to several important causes of death. In contrast, major improvements in air quality would be required to substantially reduce mortality from PM2.5 in more polluted regions, such as China and India. Moreover, forecasted demographic and epidemiological transitions in India and China imply that to keep PM2.5-attributable mortality rates (deaths per 100 000 people per year) constant, average PM2.5 levels would need to decline by ∼20-30% over the next 15 years merely to offset increases in PM2.5-attributable mortality from aging populations. An effective program to deliver clean air to the world's most polluted regions could avoid several hundred thousand premature deaths each year.
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              Carbon dioxide and climate impulse response functions for the computation of greenhouse gas metrics: a multi-model analysis

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment
                Int J Life Cycle Assess
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0948-3349
                1614-7502
                February 2017
                December 12 2016
                February 2017
                : 22
                : 2
                : 138-147
                Article
                10.1007/s11367-016-1246-y
                2b7bb230-19ab-4535-9b29-b8a44cc136ed
                © 2017

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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