Despite Decades of Cleanup, Communities of Color Still Have the Worst Air Pollution in the U.S.

Smog over downtown Los Angeles.

Smog over downtown Los Angeles. Ben Amstutz / Flickr

Wealthy white Americans are still getting to breathe cleaner air than lower-income communities of color, despite significant nationwide reductions in pollution since the 1980s, according to a new study.

Fine particle pollution — which is 2.5 micrometers or smaller — has fallen an average of about 70 percent since 1981. But air pollution is not equally distributed around America.

In general, the gap between communities with the cleanest and dirtiest air has narrowed. Still, the already disadvantaged parts of the United States continue to have the worst air.

The most polluted census tracts in 1981 remained the most polluted in 2016, according to the peer-reviewed research in the journal Science.

Southern California in particular struggles with dirtier air from highways, fossil fuel operations and industrial facilities.

“If a child was born in Los Angeles county today, they would be exposed to the same amount of pollution the average child was exposed to in the early 1990s,” said Jonathan Colmer, a coauthor and economics professor who directs the Environmental Inequality Lab at the University of Virginia.

Reducing disparity has been a stated goal of U.S. environmental policy for decades, Colmer said, but the country is falling short.

Fine particle pollution is microscopic, about 40 times smaller than a grain of sand. It can travel deep into the lungs, bloodstream, and brain and reduce life expectancy and contribute to lung cancer and heart disease.

“Air pollution contributes to as many as 9 million premature deaths worldwide every year. This is twice as many as war, other violence, HIV/Aids, tuberculosis, and malaria combined,” Colmer said.

The vast majority of U.S. census tracts saw little change in their pollution levels in comparison with the national average, with a few exceptions.

Ohio, West Virginia, eastern Kentucky — the north-east corridor — all of those places became relatively less polluted. While California’s Central and Imperial valleys, southwestern Arizona, southern Texas, and portions of Arkansas and Oklahoma have become relatively more polluted.

The changes are likely from environmental regulations, declines in manufacturing, a reduction in coal use in some parts of the country and a boom in natural gas fracking in others.

—Emily Holden, The Guardian