González David J X, Morton Claire M, Hill Lee Ann L, Michanowicz Drew R, Rossi Robert J, Shonkoff Seth B C, Casey Joan A, Morello-Frosch Rachel
Division of Environmental Health Sciences School of Public Health University of California, Berkeley Berkeley CA USA.
Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management University of California, Berkeley Berkeley CA USA.
Geohealth. 2023 Mar 23;7(3):e2022GH000690. doi: 10.1029/2022GH000690. eCollection 2023 Mar.
People living near oil and gas development are exposed to multiple environmental stressors that pose health risks. Some studies suggest these risks are higher for racially and socioeconomically marginalized people, which may be partly attributable to disparities in exposures. We examined whether racially and socioeconomically marginalized people in California are disproportionately exposed to oil and gas wells and associated hazards. We longitudinally assessed exposure to wells during three time periods (2005-2009, 2010-2014, and 2015-2019) using sociodemographic data at the census block group-level. For each block group and time period, we assessed exposure to new, active, retired, and plugged wells, and cumulative production volume. We calculated risk ratios to determine whether marginalized people disproportionately resided near wells (within 1 km). Averaged across the three time periods, we estimated that 1.1 million Californians (3.0%) lived within 1 km of active wells. Nearly 9 million Californians (22.9%) lived within 1 km of plugged wells. The proportion of Black residents near active wells was 42%-49% higher than the proportion of Black residents across California, and the proportion of Hispanic residents near active wells was 4%-13% higher than their statewide proportion. Disparities were greatest in areas with the highest oil and gas production, where the proportion of Black residents was 105%-139% higher than statewide. Socioeconomically marginalized residents also had disproportionately high exposure to wells. Though oil and gas production has declined in California, marginalized communities persistently had disproportionately high exposure to wells, potentially contributing to health disparities.
居住在油气开发区域附近的人们面临多种环境压力源,这些压力源会带来健康风险。一些研究表明,对于在种族和社会经济方面处于边缘地位的人群,这些风险更高,这可能部分归因于暴露程度的差异。我们研究了加利福尼亚州在种族和社会经济方面处于边缘地位的人群是否过多地暴露于油井和气井以及相关危害之中。我们利用人口普查街区组层面的社会人口数据,纵向评估了三个时间段(2005 - 2009年、2010 - 2014年和2015 - 2019年)内对油井和气井的暴露情况。对于每个街区组和时间段,我们评估了对新的、活跃的、废弃的和封堵的油井和气井的暴露情况,以及累计产量。我们计算了风险比率,以确定边缘人群是否过多地居住在油井和气井附近(1公里范围内)。在这三个时间段内进行平均计算,我们估计有110万加利福尼亚人(3.0%)居住在活跃油井1公里范围内。近900万加利福尼亚人(22.9%)居住在封堵油井1公里范围内。活跃油井附近的黑人居民比例比加利福尼亚州黑人居民的比例高42% - 49%,活跃油井附近的西班牙裔居民比例比其全州比例高4% - 13%。在油气产量最高的地区,差异最为显著,那里的黑人居民比例比全州高105% - 139%。社会经济方面处于边缘地位的居民对油井和气井的暴露程度也过高。尽管加利福尼亚州的油气产量有所下降,但边缘社区对油井和气井的暴露程度仍然持续过高,这可能导致了健康差异。