Benefit transfer in valuing the costs of air pollution

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Benefit transfer in valuing the costs of air pollution

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proportional hazard : 45 for the US, about 75 for China & Russia/Ukraine,140 for India ... Urban air pollution in China & Asia ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Benefit transfer in valuing the costs of air pollution


1
Benefit transfer in valuing the costs of air
pollution
  • Gordon Hughes
  • The World Bank NERA UK

2
The issues
  • How much does air pollution contribute to the
    total burden of disease ?
  • Links between valuation-based approaches and
    those using a health metric (DALYs)
  • Differences in impacts across countries or
    regions of the world
  • Role of different types of air pollution indoor
    air pollution, urban air pollution, etc

3
Benefit transfer DALYs vs dollars
  • Global burden of disease approach
  • includes discounting and age weighting
  • widely applied to assessing health interventions
  • Valuation for cost-benefit analysis across health
    / non-health concerns and policies
  • Sensitivity to demographic characteristics of the
    exposed populations
  • Are hazards proportional ?

4
A DALY-based approach
  • Wide range of YLLs lost per air pollution death
  • with proportional hazard the range is from 6.6
    for developed countries to 21.1 in India
  • with hazard after age 40 only, the range is from
    5.4 for developed countries to 8.3 for
    Russia/Ukraine
  • In most cases the long run saving in YLLs is
    significantly lower because of the links between
    mortality rates and population age structure

5
Years of life lost due to air pollution deaths
6
Using DALYs for VOSL transfers
  • VOSLs derived from wage differential studies
  • an average loss of about 24 YLLs per death
  • typical VOSLs are 6-8 times GNP per capita per
    YLL
  • For air pollution deaths, range of VOSLs as
    multiple of GNP per capita
  • proportional hazard 45 for the US, about 75 for
    China Russia/Ukraine,140 for India
  • non-proportional hazard 37 for the US, 43 for
    China, 57 for India Russia/Ukraine

7
Values of a statistical life based on DALY / YLL
calculations
8
Indoor air pollution in India
  • What is the role of environmental factors in the
    total burden of disease ?
  • Studies show large impact of indoor air pollution
    on infant mortality morbidity
  • Environmental factors account for 18-21 of total
    burden of disease
  • indoor air pollution is largest component
  • urban air pollution relatively small but growing

9
Indoor air pollution and rural infant/child
mortality
10
Improvements in the household environment and the
burden of disease
11
Urban air pollution in China Asia
  • Costs of urban air pollution projected from 1995
    to 2020 under various scenarios
  • Already large in 1995, but would get much worse
    under a business as usual scenario
  • Provided the basis for cost-benefit analyses of
    alternative environmental strategies
  • Analysis had significant role in efforts to
    persuade countries to adopt low/medium cost
    control strategies

12
Cost of urban air pollution in Asia(under a
business as usual scenario)
13
The transition in CEE/NIS countries
  • Did the transition in the CEE/NIS countries
    reduce environmental damage ?
  • Yes, in Central Eastern Europe
  • significant fall in exposure levels stable or
    declining mortality rates
  • No, in Russia, Ukraine the NIS
  • small fall in exposure levels offset by
    significant deterioration in general health
    conditions and mortality rates

14
Premature mortality due to air pollution in
CEE/NIS countries, 1990-95
15
Valuation of air pollution damages in CEE/NIS
countries, 1990-95
16
Local, regional global air pollution
  • Damage estimation benefit transfer methods used
    to assess the relative importance of different
    categories of air pollution
  • Many technical questions but broad results are
    fairly robust
  • Highlights large health burden due to indoor
    urban air pollution over next 2 decades
  • Very different regional priorities in addressing
    air pollution concerns

17
Premature mortality and burden of disease due to
air pollution(projected averages 2000-2020)
18
Present value of damage due to air pollution for
21st century
19
Long run damage due to air pollutionper capita
and relative to GNP
20
Cumulative costs of local and global damage by
income
21
Conclusions 1
  • Simple methods of benefit transfer are not robust
  • must adjust for the type of air pollution hazard
    and differences in age structures mortality
    rates
  • impact of air pollution on infant/child mortality
    is especially important
  • Use of DALYs or YLLs as measure of damage caused
    by air pollution may be sufficient for many types
    of policy analysis
  • e.g. comparing the burden of disease associated
    with different environmental/social factors

22
Conclusions 2
  • Doubts about using VOSLs to value the costs of
    air pollution in developing countries
  • the resulting estimates are extremely high
    relative to the income of those affected
  • problems of adding-up and consistency are more
    severe for low income / high mortality countries
  • But, benefit transfer methods can be useful for
    comparisons of the relative damages from
    different types of air pollution or other
    environmental factors
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