Air Pollution and Infant Mortality: Evidence from Saharan Dust

Working Paper: NBER ID: w26107

Authors: Sam Heftneal; Jennifer Burney; Eran Bendavid; Kara Voss; Marshall Burke

Abstract: Accurate estimation of air quality impacts on health outcomes is critical for guiding policy choices to mitigate such damages. Estimation poses an empirical challenge, however, because local economic activity can simultaneously generate changes in both air quality and in health impacts that are independent of air quality, confounding pollution-health estimates. To address this challenge, we leverage plausibly exogenous variation in local particulate matter exposure across sub-Saharan Africa due to dust export from the Bodele Depression, a remote Saharan region responsible for a substantial share of global atmospheric dust. Large scale transport of this dust is uncorrelated with local emissions sources and allows us to isolate the causal impact of air quality on infant mortality across Sub-Saharan Africa. Combining detailed information on nearly 1 million births with satellite measures of aerosol particulate matter, we find that a 10mg/m3 increase in local ambient PM2.5 concentration driven by distant dust emission causes a 22% increase in infant mortality across our African sample (95% CI: 10-35%), an effect comparable to quasi-experimental pollution-infant mortality estimates from wealthier countries. We also show that rainfall over the Bodele is a significant control on PM2.5 export and thus child health, and that future climate-change driven changes in Saharan rainfall could generate very large impacts on African child health through this pathway alone. We calculate that seemingly exotic proposals to pump and apply groundwater to the Bodele to reduce dust emission could be cost competitive with leading interventions aimed at improving child health.

Keywords: air pollution; infant mortality; Saharan dust; public health; climate change

JEL Codes: O12; Q53


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
rainfall over the Bodele (Q54)local PM2.5 exposure (I14)
interventions aimed at reducing dust emissions (Q54)effectiveness of health interventions (I14)
climate change (Q54)rainfall patterns (Q54)
local ambient PM2.5 concentration (R23)infant mortality (J13)
dust emissions from the Bodele Depression (Q54)local PM2.5 exposure (I14)
local ambient PM2.5 concentration (R23)child health (I19)

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