Title: Poisson regression result 1988 1997 for summer only
1Health costs of vehicle emissions
Tord Kjellstrom, National Centre for
Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian
National University, Canberra (Australian
Transport Research Forum, Canberra, Oct 2nd 2002)
2Issues to be explored
- Which health issues need to be considered in
relation to vehicle transport ? - What are the emissions from vehicles and what are
their potential health impacts ? - Can the health effects of emissions be
demonstrated and quantified ? - What might be the health and other cost changes
from reduced emissions ? (NZ examples) - How would different policy measures reduce the
health costs ?
3Indicators of vehicle density and traffic safety,
1998
4Health hazards associated with different
transport modes (relative to the hazards created
by walking)
5Main air pollution sources and issues
- MOTOR VEHICLES increasing traffic density
gradual introduction of emission controls
including low emission engines increasing local
concern about air pollution greenhouse gases. - HOME HEATING use of wood and coal decreasing
still important in certain communities influence
of oil and electricity prices greenhouse gases. - INDUSTRY AND POWER STATIONS local problems in
hot spots greenhouse gases.
6Major air pollutants from vehicles
- Carbon Monoxide
- Nitrogen dioxide
- Ozone (secondary pollutant)
- Sulfur dioxide
- (Lead)
- Particles TSP, PM10, PM2.5
- Hydrocarbons (VOCs, PAHs, incl. BaP)
- Other greenhouse gases (CO2)
- Actual air concentrations very dependent on
windspeed, wind direction and rainfall
7Main health effects of vehicle air pollutants
8Dose-relationships for PM10 and different health
effect indicators (WHO air quality guidelines,
2000)
9Christchurch, typical daily air pollution
variations
10(No Transcript)
11Daily mortality residual of regression model
without pollutants, against the level of PM10
Christchurch
Each point is an average of 20 adjacent points
sorted by PM10
12Poisson regression result (Christchurch, 1988 -
1997)(for summer months, September - April)
Health outcome Total deaths
- Maximum hourly temperature above 27.9 degree C
had a significant effect on same day total
mortality but no significant effect on total
mortality on subsequent days. - PM10 level had a significant effect on same day
total mortality and also on total mortality on
the subsequent day. - CO and NO2 levels were not significant when PM10
was in the model (strong correlation between
pollutant levels) - Thus, summer air pollution (almost exclusively
vehicle related) increases mortality
13Mortality effect of urban air pollution (PM, NO2,
CO or ozone)
- Numerous studies in North America, Europe and
Asia show daily mortality increase (also in
Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne and Perth) - 1 daily mortality increase per 10 ug/m3 PM10
- Two major studies in the USA show annual
mortality increase related to annual PM10 or
PM2.5 - 3 4 annual total mortality increase per
annual 10 ug/m3 PM10 increase - Recent studies show lung cancer increase
14Mode of transport to commute to work, census day,
1996
Average public transport use Auckland region 6
Melbourne 16 Stockholm 37
15Auckland example Health costs of private
vehicle transport vs. public transport
- Car crash deaths during commuting hours
- Deaths related to vehicle emissions emitted
during the same hours - Deaths due to increased mortality among people
with obesity related to lack of physical activity
during commuting
16Estimating deaths from crashes and emissions
- 80 deaths/year in car crashes 50 during weekday
commuting hours 40 deaths/year - recent study in Europe car air pollution
contributes to 400 deaths/million people/10 ug/m3
PM10 - if half of Aucklands million people are exposed
to 10 ug/m3 from vehicles, and half of the
pollution is created during weekday commuting
hours
.
100 deaths/year
17Deaths from lack of physical activity among car
drivers
- - lack of natural daily physical exercise one
outcome of in the 300,000 car commuters of
Auckland - obesity prevalence in Auckland appr. 20 (60,000
of car commuters) - obesity increase among constant car users appr.
1.2 (appr. 10,000 car-obese among commuters) - at 0.8 background mortality per year and appr.
50 increased mortality among obese people, the
car commuter obesity would cause 0.4 x 10,000 -
40 deaths/year
18Potentially reduced health costs with increased
public transport commuting and reduced
unnecessary car driving in Auckland
- Total road toll from crashes, air pollution and
obesogenic environment 180/year - Bringing Auckland to Melbourne level (10 reduced
car commuting) possibly saves 18 lives/year - Bringing Auckland to Stockholm level (25 reduced
car commuting) possibly saves 45 lives/year
19The cost of public health impacts of transport
and adaptation actions
- Includes
- mortality ( 2 million per life, MoT)
- hospital admissions (2,000 per admission)
- Other health care costs
- cost of absenteeism from work or school
- noise protection of communities, schools,
workplaces, homes, etc. - traffic safety measures, air pollution control
- cost of heat/climate related health impacts
20Collateral externality gains from Health cost
or Greenhouse gas reductions
- NZ Transport emissions, 1998 6381 kt CO2 equ.
- In Auckland, appr. 30 1900 kt
- If 25 reduction of private car commuting leads
to 20 reduction of CO2 380 kt - ( 6 of transport and 0.5 of total GHGs)
- at US 21/ton CO2 equ.gtgtgt
- Value of reduced CO2 NZ 20 million/yr
- Value of reduced mortality NZ 90 million/yr
- To this should be added other health costs
- Thus, CO2 value alone underestimates economic
value by at least a factor of 5 ! ( 20 instead
of 110 million)
21NZ National example
Health effects due to motor vehicle air
pollution in New Zealand. Report to the
Ministry of Transport 20 March,
2002 G.W. Fisher1, K. A. Rolfe2, Prof. T.
Kjellstrom3, Prof. A. Woodward4, Dr S. Hales4,
Dr A. P. Sturman5, Dr S. Kingham5, J. Petersen1,
R. Shrestha3, D. King1. 1. NIWA 2. Kevin
Rolfe Associates Limited 3. University of
Auckland 4. Wellington Medical School 5.
University of Canterbury http//www.transport.gov
t.nz/publications/niwa_report
22Health cost calculation method
- 1. Air monitoring results in urban areas,
geographic distribution when possible - 2. Emission inventories to estimate fraction of
total air pollution emitted from vehicles - 3. Population data by geographic area to estimate
number exposed - 4. Health effects based on annual linear
dose-response relationship, with a threshold and
adjustment for background mortality
23Total mortality (all ages) due to road toll and
vehicle emissions
24Mortality rates per million people gt 30 years of
age due to traffic crashes and vehicle emissions
25 Estimated annual deaths due to air pollution
26Health cost implications of different transport
policies
27Conclusions
- Epidemiological and other health research
evidence on health impacts is accumulating - More accurate quantitative estimates of health
costs are becoming possible - Integrated epidemiology and health economics
research can help inform policy development - Important to consider collateral externality
gains of policies for health cost reduction,
particularly greenhouse gas gains
28The End Thank you !