4.7 Article

Assessment of the health benefits to children of a transportation climate policy in New York City

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 215, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2022.114165

Keywords

Child health; Climate change; Air pollution; Fossil fuel; Co-benefits; Equity

Funding

  1. John Merck Fund
  2. John and Wendy Neu Foundation
  3. New York Community Trust
  4. Barr Foundation
  5. Energy Foundation

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This study estimates the benefits of different cap-and-investment scenarios on child health in New York City neighborhoods. The results show that reducing carbon emissions can significantly improve children's health, with greater benefits for Black and Hispanic children.
Background: Assessments of health and environmental effects of clean air and climate policies have revealed substantial health benefits due to reductions in air pollution, but have included few pediatric outcomes or assessed benefits at the neighborhood level. Objectives: We estimated benefits across a suite of child health outcomes in 42 New York City (NYC) neighbor-hoods under the proposed regional Transportation and Climate Initiative. We also estimated their distribution across racial/ethnic and socioeconomic groups.Methods: We estimated changes in ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) concen-trations associated with on-road emissions under nine different predefined cap-and-invest scenarios. Health outcomes, including selected adverse birth, respiratory, and neurodevelopmental outcomes, were estimated using a program similar to the U.S. EPA BenMAP program. We stratified the associated monetized benefits across racial/ethnic and socioeconomic groups.Results: The benefits varied widely over the different cap-and-investment scenarios. For a 25% reduction in carbon emissions from 2022 to 2032 and a strategy prioritizing public transit investments, NYC would have an estimated 48 fewer medical visits for childhood asthma, 13,000 avoided asthma exacerbations not requiring medical visits, 640 fewer respiratory illnesses unrelated to asthma, and 9 avoided adverse birth outcomes (infant mortality, preterm birth, and term low birth weight) annually, starting in 2032. The total estimated annual avoided costs are $22 million. City-wide, Black and Hispanic children would experience 1.7 times the health benefits per capita than White and Non-Hispanic White children, respectively. Under the same scenario, neighborhoods experiencing the highest poverty rates in NYC would experience about 2.5 times the health benefits per capita than the lowest poverty neighborhoods.Conclusion: A cap-and-invest strategy to reduce carbon emissions from the transportation sector could provide substantial health and monetized benefits to children in NYC through reductions in criteria pollutant concen-trations, with greater benefits among Black and Hispanic children.

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