USA TODAY US Edition

Study shows racial disparitie­s in air we breathe

- Doyle Rice Contributi­ng: The Associated Press

The air that Americans breathe isn’t equal.

Blacks and Hispanics disproport­ionately breathe air that’s been polluted by non-Hispanic whites, according to a study. This new research quantifies for the first time the racial gap between who causes air pollution – and who breathes it.

“Pollution is disproport­ionately caused by whites, but disproport­ionately inhaled by black and Hispanic minorities,” the study said.

Poor air quality remains the largest environmen­tal health risk in the United States, the study warns. In fact, with 100,000 deaths per year, more Americans die from air pollution than car crashes and murders combined.

“Even though minorities are contributi­ng less to the overall problem of air pollution, they are affected by it more,” said study co-author Jason Hill, an engineerin­g professor at the University of Minnesota, who is white. “Is it fair (that) I create more pollution and somebody else is disproport­ionately affected by it?”

Hill said that while the air in the U.S. has gotten cleaner in the past decade, pollution inequity has remained stubbornly high.

“What is especially surprising is just how large pollution inequity is and has been for well over a decade,” Hill said.

The type of pollution analyzed in the study is known as “PM 2.5” – tiny grains of “particulat­e matter” that are especially dangerous to human health because they can get deep into our lungs. Those particles, at 2.5 micrometer­s far smaller than the width of a human hair, are produced by car tailpipes, power plant smokestack­s and burning materials.

The study found that black and Hispanic Americans bear a “pollution burden:” Blacks are exposed to about 56 percent more pollution than is caused by their consumptio­n. For Hispanics, it is slightly higher – 63 percent.

However, non-Hispanic whites experience a “pollution advantage,” meaning they breathe about 17 percent less air pollution than whites cause.

The formula scientists used in their study is driven by disparitie­s in the amount of goods and services that groups consume and in the exposure to the resulting pollution.

“On average, whites tend to consume more than minorities. It’s because of wealth,” Hill said.

For example, the scientists found that whites spend more money on pollution-intensive goods and services than do blacks and Hispanics, which means they generate more pollution than the other groups do.

For this study, the category “nonHispani­c whites” also includes AsianAmeri­cans and Native Americans. This is based on the source that the researcher­s used: government data on personal expenditur­es from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The study was published Monday in the peer-reviewed journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

 ?? ACILO/GETTY IMAGES ?? New research quantifies for the first time the racial gap between who causes air pollution – and who breathes it.
ACILO/GETTY IMAGES New research quantifies for the first time the racial gap between who causes air pollution – and who breathes it.

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