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Environmental Justice in India: Incidence of Air Pollution from Coal-Fired Power Plants

  • Jacob Kopas
  • , Erin York
  • , Xiaomeng Jin
  • , S. P. Harish
  • , Ryan Kennedy
  • , Shiran Victoria Shen
  • , Johannes Urpelainen

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Air pollution is a vexing problem for emerging countries that strike a delicate balance between environmental protection, health, and energy for growth. We examine these difficulties in a study of disparate levels of exposure to pollution from coal-fired power generation in India, a country with high levels of air pollution and large, marginalized populations. With data on coal plant locations, atmospheric conditions, and census demographics, we estimate exposure to coal plant emissions using models that predict emission transportation. We find that ethnic and poor populations are more likely to be exposed to coal pollution. However, this relationship is sometimes non-linear and follows an inverted u-shape similar to that of an Environmental Kuznets Curve. We theorize that this non-linear relationship is due to the exclusion of marginalized communities from both the negative and positive externalities of industrial development.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number106711
    JournalEcological Economics
    Volume176
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Oct 2020

    Keywords

    • Air Pollution
    • Coal Energy
    • Environmental Discrimination
    • Environmental Justice
    • Environmental Kuznets Curve
    • India

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