Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy > Vol 5 > Issue 4

Political Institutions, Energy Transitions, and Air Quality: Evidence from Global Urban Areas

Cesar B. Martinez-Alvarez, Department of Political Science, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA, cbmartinez@ucsb.edu
 
Suggested Citation
Cesar B. Martinez-Alvarez (2024), "Political Institutions, Energy Transitions, and Air Quality: Evidence from Global Urban Areas", Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy: Vol. 5: No. 4, pp 581-626. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/113.00000112

Publication Date: 30 Dec 2024
© 2024 C. B. Martinez-Alvarez
 
Subjects
Renewables integration,  Democratization
 
Keywords
Air pollutionclimate change policyenergy transitioncoal power plantsdemocratizationpublic goods
 

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In this article:
Introduction 
The Political Economy of Local Public Goods 
Air Pollution as a Local Environmental Public Good 
Empirical Strategy 
Data and Analytical Methods 
Empirical Results 
Empirical Findings 
Concluding Remarks and Discussion 
References 

Abstract

What explains that some countries and cities provide more local environmental public goods, such as good air quality, than others? Research in political science has emphasized the relevance of macro-level institutional variables, in particular regime type, to explain urban environmental outcomes. Recently, the global policy efforts to mitigate climate change have transformed energy systems worldwide, therefore affecting one of the key drivers of air pollution. Despite the implications of the energy transition, we know little about its consequences at the local level. In this paper, I study how political and climate-policy changes affect air quality. To do so, I employ data on mortality rates associated with air pollution, proximity to coal infrastructure, and exposure to political regime change for a sample of 12,990 metropolitan areas worldwide. I find that cities in countries that experienced instances of democratization and those located close to retiring coal power plants had substantial decreases in mortality rates associated with particulate matter and nitrogen dioxide. Moreover, I show that the rate of coal infrastructure retirement is associated with the overall climate policy effort of a country. My findings suggest that, in addition to its global implications, the energy transition has crucial local public health impacts, particularly among urban populations; therefore, climate policy is a crucial element to understand variation in local environmental public goods globally.

DOI:10.1561/113.00000112

Online Appendix | 113.00000112_app.pdf

This is the article's accompanying appendix.

DOI: 10.1561/113.00000112_app

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Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy, Volume 5, Issue 4 Special Issue: The Political Economy of Energy: Articles Overiew
See the other articles that are part of this special issue.