An environmental justice analysis of air pollution emissions in the United States from 1970 to 2010.
Yanelli NunezJaime BenavidesJenni A ShearstonElena M KriegerMisbath DaoudaLucas R F HennemanErin E McDuffieJeff GoldsmithJoan A CaseyMarianthi-Anna KioumourtzoglouPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Over the last decades, air pollution emissions have decreased substantially; however, inequities in air pollution persist. We evaluate county-level racial/ethnic and socioeconomic disparities in emissions changes from six air pollution source sectors (industry [SO 2 ], energy [SO 2 , NO x ], agriculture [NH 3 ], commercial [NO x ], residential [particulate organic carbon], and on-road transportation [NO x ]) in the contiguous United States during the 40 years following the Clean Air Act (CAA) enactment (1970-2010). We calculate relative emission changes and examine the differential changes given county demographics using hierarchical nested models. The results show racial/ethnic disparities, particularly in the industry and energy generation source sectors. We also find that median family income is a driver of variation in relative emissions changes in all sectors-counties with median family income >$75 K vs. less generally experience larger relative declines in industry, energy, transportation, residential, and commercial-related emissions. Emissions from most air pollution source sectors have, on a national level, decreased following the United States CAA. In this work, we show that the relative reductions in emissions varied across racial/ethnic and socioeconomic groups.