Income disparities lead to unequal air quality impact of EVs, according to study.

Income disparities lead to unequal air quality impact of EVs, according to study.

A group of environmental scientists and city planners from the University of California, Berkeley, the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and the University of Miami have discovered that the introduction of electric-powered vehicles (EVs) in place of gasoline-powered vehicles (GVs) has varying effects on air quality in different neighborhoods. The study, published in PLOS Climate, found that air quality tends to improve in higher-income neighborhoods, while it remains the same or worsens in poor neighborhoods.

The researchers, Jaye Mejı´a-Duwan, Miyuki Hino, and Katharine Mach, examined the impact of introducing EVs in California and the resulting changes in air quality. To learn more about the true impact of the switch to EVs from GVs, the researchers obtained and studied environmental data gathered as part of a government EV rebate program from 2010 to 2021. They found that as EV sales rose, air quality in higher-income neighborhoods tended to improve as expected, but the same could not be said for poor neighborhoods, where conditions did not change much or became worse.

The researchers identified three major factors contributing to this disparity. The first was non-engine produced pollutant emissions. Vehicles traveling on highways, which tend to be closer to poor neighborhoods, produce other pollutants due to road and tire wear. Tire tread particles and brake pad particles become airborne, and speeding cars continuously whip dust, dirt, and other particles near the road surface into the air. The second reason air quality does not improve in poor neighborhoods is that air pollution from power plants increases as demand increases to charge all the new EVs on the road. Power plants tend to be located closer to poor neighborhoods. The third factor is the higher cost of EVs. People in poor neighborhoods quite often cannot afford to buy them, thus EVs are less likely to be driven there.

2023-05-06 07:30:03
Source from phys.org

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