4.5 Article

Air quality improvement from COVID-19 lockdown: evidence from China

Journal

AIR QUALITY ATMOSPHERE AND HEALTH
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages 591-604

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11869-020-00963-y

Keywords

COVID-19 pandemic; Air pollution; Lockdown; Heterogeneity; Health benefit

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71603047]
  2. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions and Southeast University graduate innovation project [KYZZ:160100]

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The COVID-19 pandemic-induced human mobility restrictions have significantly impacted urban air quality in China, with cities under lockdown experiencing greater reductions in air pollutants. The study reveals that the improvement in air quality has positive health benefits, especially in economically active and industrialized cities.
As we move through 2020, our world has been transformed by the spread of COVID-19 in many aspects. A large number of cities across the world entered sleep mode sequentially due to the stay-at-home or lockdown policies. This study exploits the impact of pandemic-induced human mobility restrictions, as the response to COVID-19 pandemic, on the urban air quality across China. Different from the traditional difference-in-differences analysis, a human mobility-based difference-in-differences method is used to quantify the effect of intracity mobility reductions on air quality across 325 cities in China. The model shows that the air quality index (AQI) experiences a 12.2% larger reduction in the cities with lockdown. Moreover, this reduction effect varies with different types of air pollutants (PM2.5, PM10, SO2, NO2, and CO decreased by 13.1%, 15.3%, 4%, 3.3%, and 3.3%, respectively). The heterogeneity analysis in terms of different types of cities shows that the effect is greater in northern, higher income, more industrialized cities, and more economically active cities. We also estimate the subsequent health benefits following such improvement, and the expected averted premature deaths due to air pollution declines are around 26,385 to 38,977 during the sample period. These findings illuminate a new light on the role of a policy intervention in the pollution emission, while also providing a roadmap for future research on the pollution effect of COVID-19 pandemic.

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