Cumulative air pollution indicators highlight unique patterns of injustice in urban Canada

Disparities in air pollution exposure are a form of distributional environmental injustice that has been documented in many jurisdictions around the world. In Canada, although there is a growing literature characterizing exposure inequalities, an important gap is research that captures the cumulativ...

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Main Authors: Amanda Giang, Kaitlin Castellani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2020-01-01
Series:Environmental Research Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abcac5
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author Amanda Giang
Kaitlin Castellani
author_facet Amanda Giang
Kaitlin Castellani
author_sort Amanda Giang
collection DOAJ
description Disparities in air pollution exposure are a form of distributional environmental injustice that has been documented in many jurisdictions around the world. In Canada, although there is a growing literature characterizing exposure inequalities, an important gap is research that captures the cumulative impact of the multiple air pollutants to which communities are exposed. Here, we present a screening-level analysis of inequalities in single pollutant and cumulative air pollution burdens in three major cities in Canada: Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. We construct three cumulative hazard indices (CHIs), using previously published national datasets for PM _2.5 , NO _2 , SO _2 , and O _3 concentrations for illustrative year 2012. We describe the ways in which patterns of inequality differ between pollutants, between ways of calculating cumulative burden, and between cities. Different methods of constructing CHIs can yield different understandings of the spatial distribution of pollution, and in turn, inequality. We find the largest spatial variations for a CHI based on whether each pollutant exceeds an external benchmark (here, air quality guidelines), which translates into the largest calculated disparities in cumulative air pollution burdens for marginalized groups. We observe distinct patterns of inequality between the cities, in terms of which marginalized groups consistently experience higher cumulative air pollution burdens (Vancouver: Indigenous residents, Montreal: immigrant residents, Toronto: low-income residents). Results also highlight the importance of using a suite of socio-demographic indicators as patterns can differ between individual racialized/ethnic groups, and between different measures of socio-economic status. This work illustrates how a range of cumulative hazard screening indicators could be used in a policy context in Canada and elsewhere, while highlighting some of the methodological complexities in how environmental and social risks are characterized and combined. Given these complexities, we suggest that community input should inform the design of environmental justice indicators, as an important component of procedural justice.
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spelling doaj.art-4c2e29ae31c04bb986a24620d8d273ac2023-08-09T14:59:50ZengIOP PublishingEnvironmental Research Letters1748-93262020-01-01151212406310.1088/1748-9326/abcac5Cumulative air pollution indicators highlight unique patterns of injustice in urban CanadaAmanda Giang0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0146-7038Kaitlin Castellani1Institute for Resources, Environment & Sustainability, University of British Columbia , 2202 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T1Z4, CanadaInstitute for Resources, Environment & Sustainability, University of British Columbia , 2202 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T1Z4, CanadaDisparities in air pollution exposure are a form of distributional environmental injustice that has been documented in many jurisdictions around the world. In Canada, although there is a growing literature characterizing exposure inequalities, an important gap is research that captures the cumulative impact of the multiple air pollutants to which communities are exposed. Here, we present a screening-level analysis of inequalities in single pollutant and cumulative air pollution burdens in three major cities in Canada: Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. We construct three cumulative hazard indices (CHIs), using previously published national datasets for PM _2.5 , NO _2 , SO _2 , and O _3 concentrations for illustrative year 2012. We describe the ways in which patterns of inequality differ between pollutants, between ways of calculating cumulative burden, and between cities. Different methods of constructing CHIs can yield different understandings of the spatial distribution of pollution, and in turn, inequality. We find the largest spatial variations for a CHI based on whether each pollutant exceeds an external benchmark (here, air quality guidelines), which translates into the largest calculated disparities in cumulative air pollution burdens for marginalized groups. We observe distinct patterns of inequality between the cities, in terms of which marginalized groups consistently experience higher cumulative air pollution burdens (Vancouver: Indigenous residents, Montreal: immigrant residents, Toronto: low-income residents). Results also highlight the importance of using a suite of socio-demographic indicators as patterns can differ between individual racialized/ethnic groups, and between different measures of socio-economic status. This work illustrates how a range of cumulative hazard screening indicators could be used in a policy context in Canada and elsewhere, while highlighting some of the methodological complexities in how environmental and social risks are characterized and combined. Given these complexities, we suggest that community input should inform the design of environmental justice indicators, as an important component of procedural justice.https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abcac5air qualityenvironmental justicecumulative hazardsCanada
spellingShingle Amanda Giang
Kaitlin Castellani
Cumulative air pollution indicators highlight unique patterns of injustice in urban Canada
Environmental Research Letters
air quality
environmental justice
cumulative hazards
Canada
title Cumulative air pollution indicators highlight unique patterns of injustice in urban Canada
title_full Cumulative air pollution indicators highlight unique patterns of injustice in urban Canada
title_fullStr Cumulative air pollution indicators highlight unique patterns of injustice in urban Canada
title_full_unstemmed Cumulative air pollution indicators highlight unique patterns of injustice in urban Canada
title_short Cumulative air pollution indicators highlight unique patterns of injustice in urban Canada
title_sort cumulative air pollution indicators highlight unique patterns of injustice in urban canada
topic air quality
environmental justice
cumulative hazards
Canada
url https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abcac5
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AT kaitlincastellani cumulativeairpollutionindicatorshighlightuniquepatternsofinjusticeinurbancanada