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December 22, 2020

Marginalized groups experience higher cumulative air pollution in urban Canada

Fig. 1. Cumulative air pollution hazard indicator (CHI) scores by city. Areas with higher cumulative air pollution scores have higher areas of fine particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide and ozone. Three different air pollution hazard indicators shown (additive, multiplicative, binary) represent different ways of combining the four pollutants. Credit: University of British Columbia
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Fig. 1. Cumulative air pollution hazard indicator (CHI) scores by city. Areas with higher cumulative air pollution scores have higher areas of fine particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide and ozone. Three different air pollution hazard indicators shown (additive, multiplicative, binary) represent different ways of combining the four pollutants. Credit: University of British Columbia

Marginalized groups are exposed to higher cumulative air pollution in Vancouver, Montreal and Toronto, according to new research from the University of British Columbia.

The study, published last week in Environmental Research Letters, shows that in Vancouver, Indigenous residents are most at risk, while the burden falls on immigrant and low-income residents in Montreal and Toronto, respectively.

The study is an illustrative analysis for 2012 and by considering how exposure to air pollution overlaps with various socio-demographics, the study reveals unique patterns of risk.

"If you look at visible minorities as one uniform group, you're overlooking a lot of variations that different racialized groups are experiencing," said lead author Dr. Amanda Giang, an assistant professor at the Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability and department of mechanical engineering at UBC. "For instance, in the city of Vancouver racialized communities as a whole are not experiencing higher cumulative air pollution burdens than white residents, but if you look within that, we find that Indigenous, Black, Arab, and West Asian residents are, amongst other groups."

Historically, neither nor Canadian policy-making have been good at grappling with the cumulative nature of environmental impacts. A key contribution of the study is the development of cumulative indicators of air pollution hazard, pulling together data on pollutants including , nitrous oxide, sulfur dioxide and ozone.

Fig. 2. Relative difference in ambient exposure to air pollution between socially disadvantaged and advantaged groups. Positive differences indicate that the socially disadvantaged group is exposed to higher air pollution concentrations. Credit: University of British Columbia
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Fig. 2. Relative difference in ambient exposure to air pollution between socially disadvantaged and advantaged groups. Positive differences indicate that the socially disadvantaged group is exposed to higher air pollution concentrations. Credit: University of British Columbia

The researchers highlight that because people are exposed to multiple air pollutants at the same time, it is important to consider the cumulative health impacts of exposure to different pollutants. "When we talk about regulations or standards, it's often on a pollutant-by-pollutant basis. The cumulative indicators we explored are one way we can start to think about disparities in exposure to cumulative hazards for air pollution," said co-author Kaitlin Castellani, who was a research assistant in the Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability at the time of the study.

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Other key findings include:

The findings add to existing studies that show that while Canada is one of the few countries that meet World Health Organization (WHO) air quality guidelines, the areas of the nation that experience higher levels of air pollution are associated with adverse health effects. Dr. Giang points to Health Canada estimates which show that air pollution contributes to 14,600 deaths and 2.7 asthma symptom days a year.

"Inequity is part of the climate crisis," said Dr. Giang. "Many sources of air pollution are also sources of greenhouse gas emissions." She indicated that truly just environmental policy making should center equity by considering multiple aspects of social vulnerability and environmental hazard using cumulative indicators, place-based methodology, and foregrounding the perspectives of communities impacted by . These direct assessments of climate policy might ensure that what is done to advance carbon futures does not exacerbate existing inequities.

More information: Amanda Giang et al. Cumulative air pollution indicators highlight unique patterns of injustice in urban Canada, Environmental Research Letters (2020).

Journal information: Environmental Research Letters

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