Litcius/Paper detail

Wildfires exacerbate inequalities in indoor pollution exposure

Benjamin Krebs, Matthew Neidell

2024Environmental Research Letters14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Wildfires lead to dramatic increases in fine particulate matter pollution concentrations. Based on the premise that higher-income households purchase more defensive investments to reduce the degree to which outdoor pollution infiltrates indoors, in this study, we investigate how income contributes to outdoor–indoor pollution infiltration rates during wildfire events. Using crowd-sourced data from the PurpleAir Real-Time Air Quality Monitoring Network and econometric models that explore variations in monitor readings over time, we find increases in outdoor pollution lead to significant increases in indoor pollution, but disproportionately so in lower-income areas. The results highlight a new inequality in pollution exposure: not only are outdoor pollution levels higher for lower-income individuals, but indoor pollution levels are higher even for similar outdoor pollution levels.

Topics & Concepts

InequalityEnvironmental sciencePollutionMathematicsEcologyBiologyMathematical analysisEnergy and Environment ImpactsAir Quality and Health ImpactsUrban Transport and Accessibility