[AEW Webinar] Air Pollution, Wildfire Smoke, and Worker Health
Date: Thursday, Mar 6, 2025, 09:30 ~ 11:15
Speaker: Marika Ilona Cabral (UT Austin)
Location: Webinar
◈ Keynote : "Air Pollution, Wildfire Smoke, and Worker Health," with Marcus Dillender by Marika Ilona Cabral (UT Austin)
◈ AEW Discussion : "Marine Microplastics and Infant Health," by Xinming Du, Shan Zhang, and Eric Zou.
◈ 일 시 : 2025년 3월 06일 목요일 09:30 ~ 11:15
◈ 장 소 : Webinar via WebEx
Webinar 참석을 위해 아래 링크를 통한 사전 등록이 필요합니다: (https://ntucc.webex.com/weblink/register/r5af39bda3fae52ef477029cea93456bf)
Abstract
Despite growing concerns about the impact of pollution on workers, little is known about how pollution impacts worker health and workplace safety. This paper leverages high-frequency, plausibly exogenous variation in wildfire smoke to estimate the impact of pollution on workplace injuries. Our analysis draws on unique data we construct through linking information on smoke plumes and pollution to comprehensive administrative data on workers’ compensation injury claims from Texas. We first document that wildfire smoke increases ambient air pollution—with our estimates indicating that a day of smoke coverage is associated with an average increase in PM2.5 of 18.6%. We find that an additional day of smoke coverage leads to a 2.8% increase in workplace injury claims. Similar percent increases in workplace injuries are found across different types of injuries and workers. However, because of large variation in baseline injury risk, the incidence of these pollution-induced injuries is concentrated among workers in high-risk occupations, and supplemental analysis illustrates potential opportunities for improving the targeting of costly mitigation. Our estimates indicate that pollution—and wildfire smoke in particular—substantially harms worker health, even at pollution levels well below current and proposed regulatory standards, and the costs associated with increased workplace injuries are in the same range as the costs of many previously documented important adverse impacts of pollution. Overall, our findings suggest workers face unique risks from pollution and provide insights for policy aiming to address these risks.
◈ 일 시 : 2025년 3월 06일 목요일 09:30 ~ 11:15
◈ 장 소 : Webinar via WebEx
Webinar 참석을 위해 아래 링크를 통한 사전 등록이 필요합니다: (https://ntucc.webex.com/weblink/register/r5af39bda3fae52ef477029cea93456bf)
Abstract
Despite growing concerns about the impact of pollution on workers, little is known about how pollution impacts worker health and workplace safety. This paper leverages high-frequency, plausibly exogenous variation in wildfire smoke to estimate the impact of pollution on workplace injuries. Our analysis draws on unique data we construct through linking information on smoke plumes and pollution to comprehensive administrative data on workers’ compensation injury claims from Texas. We first document that wildfire smoke increases ambient air pollution—with our estimates indicating that a day of smoke coverage is associated with an average increase in PM2.5 of 18.6%. We find that an additional day of smoke coverage leads to a 2.8% increase in workplace injury claims. Similar percent increases in workplace injuries are found across different types of injuries and workers. However, because of large variation in baseline injury risk, the incidence of these pollution-induced injuries is concentrated among workers in high-risk occupations, and supplemental analysis illustrates potential opportunities for improving the targeting of costly mitigation. Our estimates indicate that pollution—and wildfire smoke in particular—substantially harms worker health, even at pollution levels well below current and proposed regulatory standards, and the costs associated with increased workplace injuries are in the same range as the costs of many previously documented important adverse impacts of pollution. Overall, our findings suggest workers face unique risks from pollution and provide insights for policy aiming to address these risks.