Inequalities in Air Pollution Exposure and Attributable Mortality in a Low Carbon Future

Author:

Reddington C. L.1ORCID,Turnock S. T.23ORCID,Conibear L.4ORCID,Forster P. M.5ORCID,Lowe J. A.26ORCID,Ford L. Berrang6,Weaver C.16,van Bavel B.6ORCID,Dong H.7ORCID,Alizadeh M. R.8ORCID,Arnold S. R.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Climate and Atmospheric Science (ICAS) School of Earth and Environment University of Leeds Woodhouse UK

2. Met Office Hadley Centre Exeter UK

3. University of Leeds Met Office Strategic (LUMOS) Research Group University of Leeds Woodhouse UK

4. The Tomorrow Companies Inc. Boston MA USA

5. Priestley Centre for Climate Futures University of Leeds Leeds UK

6. Priestley International Centre for Climate University of Leeds Leeds UK

7. School of Environmental Science and Engineering Shanghai Jiao Tong University Shanghai China

8. Department of Bioresource Engineering McGill University Montreal QC Canada

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the costs and benefits of climate change mitigation and adaptation options is crucial to justify and prioritize future decarbonization pathways to achieve net zero. Here, we quantified the co‐benefits of decarbonization for air quality and public health under scenarios that aim to limit end‐of‐century warming to 2°C and 1.5°C. We estimated the mortality burden attributable to ambient PM2.5 exposure using population attributable fractions of relative risk, incorporating projected changes in population demographics. We found that implementation of decarbonization scenarios could produce substantial global reductions in population exposure to PM2.5 pollution and associated premature mortality, with maximum health benefits achieved in Asia around mid‐century. The stringent 1.5ºC‐compliant decarbonization scenario (SSP1‐1.9) could reduce the PM2.5‐attributable mortality burden by 29% in 2050 relative to a middle‐of‐the‐road scenario (SSP2‐4.5), averting around 2.9 M annual deaths worldwide. While all income groups were found to benefit from improved air quality through a combination of decarbonization and air pollution controls, the smallest health benefits are experienced by the low‐income population. The disparity in PM2.5 exposure across income groups is projected to reduce by 2100, but a 30% disparity between high‐ and low‐income groups persists even in the strongest mitigation scenario. Further, without additional and targeted air quality measures, low‐ and lower‐middle‐income populations (predominantly in Africa and Asia) will continue to experience PM2.5 exposures that are over three times the World Health Organization Air Quality Guideline.

Funder

UK Research and Innovation

Met Office

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),General Environmental Science

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