Global air quality inequality over 2000–2020
使用经济不平等指数衡量全球PM2.5暴露的不平等程度,发现2000至2020年间全球空气质量不平等上升,且主要由国家间差异驱动,相关死亡率不平等更严重。
Air pollution generates vast health burdens and economic costs around the world. Pollution exposure varies greatly, both between countries and within them. But the degree of air quality inequality and its’ trajectory have not been quantified at a global level. I use economic inequality indices to measure global inequality in exposure to ambient fine particles smaller than 2. 5 μ m (PM 2.5 ). I find high and rising levels of global air quality inequality. The global PM 2.5 Gini Index rose from 0.30 in 2000 to 0.35 in 2020, exceeding levels of income inequality in many countries. Air quality inequality is mostly driven by differences between countries and less so by variation within them, as decomposition analysis shows. A large share of those facing the highest levels of PM 2.5 exposure live in only a few countries. Building on the Global Burden of Disease framework, I find that mortality associated with PM 2.5 exposure is even more unequal than pollution exposure itself. The findings suggest that the common focus on inequality within countries overlooks an important global dimension of environmental justice.