Subways and Urban Air Pollution
Abstract
We investigate the relationship between the opening of a city’s subway network and its air quality. We find that particulate concentrations drop by about 4% in a 10km radius disk surrounding a city center during the year... [ view full abstract ]
We investigate the relationship between the opening of a city’s subway network and its air quality. We find that particulate concentrations drop by about 4% in a 10km radius disk surrounding a city center during the year following a subway system opening. The reduction in particulates is larger nearer the city center, but extends over the whole metropolitan area. The reduction persists over the longest time horizon that we can measure with our data, about eight years, although these estimates are less reliable further from the subway opening date. Our results also point to decreasing returns to subway expansions, both in terms of particulate reduction and ridership. Using estimates from the literature on the relationship between particulates and infant mortality suggests that each subway system provides an external health benefit of about $21m per year. This external benefit is about $594m per system per year if we consider mortality reduction effects for all city residents rather than just infants. Although available subway capital costs are crude, the estimated external health effects represent a significant fraction of construction costs.
Authors
-
Marco Gonzalez-Navarro
(University of Toronto)
-
Matthew Turner
(Brown University)
-
Nicolas Gendron-Carrier
(University of Toronto)
-
Stefano Polloni
(Brown University)
Topic Areas
L. Industrial Organization: L9. Industry Studies: Transportation and Utilities , R. Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics: R1. General Regional , R. Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics: R4. Transportation E
Session
CS6-12 » Regional and Urban Economics 3 (16:30 - Saturday, 11th November, Moliere)
Paper
subways_AOD13.pdf
Presentation Files
The presenter has not uploaded any presentation files.