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印度尼西亚森林火灾对新加坡污染和健康的影响。

The Impact of Indonesian Forest Fires on Singaporean Pollution and Health.

机构信息

Department of Economics, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC.

出版信息

Am Econ Rev. 2017 May;107(5):526-9. doi: 10.1257/aer.p20171134.

Abstract

Between 1990 and 2015, Indonesia lost nearly 25 percent of its forests, largely due to intentional burning to clear land for cultivation of palm oil and timber plantations.1 The neighboring "victim countries" experienced severe deteriorations in air quality as a result of these fires. For example, Singapore experienced record air pollution levels in June of 2013 and again in September of 2015 as a result of the Indonesian forest fires.2 This air pollution is associated with increased incidences of upper respiratory tract infections, acute conjunctivitis, lung disease, asthma, bronchitis, emphysema, and pneumonia, among other ailments.2 Quantifying the impact of air pollution on health outcomes is challenging because pollution levels are often nonrandom for a variety of reasons, including policy endogeneity and sorting (Dominici, Greenstone, and Sunstein 2014). In this paper we offer the first causal analysis of the transboundary health effects of the Indonesian forest burning. The Indonesian fires induce exogenous variation in Singaporean air quality. We take advantage of this by using satellite fire data to instrument for changes in Singaporean air quality. Since Singapore is only 277.6 square miles in area (two-thirds the size of New York City), air pollution resulting from the fires is homogeneously spread so that sorting is less likely to be an issue. Using a two-stage least squares approach, we find that from 2010 through mid-2016, the Indonesian fires caused a statistically significant increase in pollution levels in Singapore. Our study also provides evidence that polyclinic attendances for acute respiratory tract infections and acute conjunctivitis in Singapore increased as a result of the deterioration in air quality. The reduced form estimates show that a one standard deviation increase in our measure of fires causes a 0.7 standard deviation increase in polyclinic attendances for each of these illnesses. These findings provide causal evidence of the transboundary pollution and health impacts of the Indonesian forest burning on neighboring Singapore.

摘要

1990 年至 2015 年间,印度尼西亚的森林面积减少了近 25%,主要原因是为了开垦土地种植棕榈油和木材种植园而进行的有计划的烧林。1 这些火灾导致邻国的空气质量严重恶化。例如,由于印度尼西亚森林火灾,新加坡在 2013 年 6 月和 2015 年 9 月经历了创纪录的空气污染水平。2 这种空气污染与上呼吸道感染、急性结膜炎、肺部疾病、哮喘、支气管炎、肺气肿和肺炎等疾病的发病率增加有关。2 由于污染水平因政策内生性和分类(多米尼奇、格林斯通和苏斯坦 2014)等各种原因而经常是非随机的,因此量化空气污染对健康结果的影响具有挑战性。在本文中,我们首次对印度尼西亚森林燃烧的跨境健康影响进行了因果分析。印度尼西亚的火灾导致新加坡的空气质量产生了外生变化。我们利用卫星火灾数据来改变新加坡的空气质量,从而利用这一点。由于新加坡的面积只有 277.6 平方英里(纽约市的三分之二),因此火灾产生的空气污染均匀分布,因此分类不太可能成为问题。我们使用两阶段最小二乘法发现,从 2010 年到 2016 年年中,印度尼西亚的火灾导致新加坡的污染水平显著上升。我们的研究还提供了证据表明,由于空气质量恶化,新加坡的综合诊所因急性呼吸道感染和急性结膜炎的就诊人数增加。简化形式估计表明,我们衡量火灾的标准偏差增加一个标准差会导致这两种疾病的综合诊所就诊次数增加 0.7 个标准差。这些发现为印度尼西亚森林燃烧对邻国新加坡的跨境污染和健康影响提供了因果证据。

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