Login / Signup

Environmental Health, Racial/Ethnic Health Disparity, and Climate Impacts of Inter-Regional Freight Transport in the United States.

Maninder P S ThindChristopher W TessumJulian D Marshall
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2022)
We quantify and compare three environmental impacts from inter-regional freight transportation in the contiguous United States: total mortality attributable to PM 2.5 air pollution, racial-ethnic disparities in PM 2.5 -attributable mortality, and CO 2 emissions. We compare all major freight modes (truck, rail, barge, aircraft) and routes (∼30,000 routes). Our study is the first to comprehensively compare each route separately and the first to explore racial-ethnic exposure disparities by route and mode, nationally. Impacts (health, health disparity, climate) per tonne of freight are the largest for aircraft. Among nonaircraft modes, per tonne, rail has the largest health and health-disparity impacts and the lowest climate impacts, whereas truck transport has the lowest health impacts and greatest climate impacts─an important reminder that health and climate impacts are often but not always aligned. For aircraft and truck, average monetized damages per tonne are larger for climate impacts than those for PM 2.5 air pollution; for rail and barge, the reverse holds. We find that average exposures from inter-regional truck and rail are the highest for White non-Hispanic people, those from barge are the highest for Black people, and those from aircraft are the highest for people who are mixed/other race. Level of exposure and disparity among racial-ethnic groups vary in urban versus rural areas.
Keyphrases
  • air pollution
  • healthcare
  • public health
  • mental health
  • climate change
  • health information
  • particulate matter
  • human health
  • cardiovascular disease
  • type diabetes
  • risk assessment
  • cardiovascular events
  • social media