TY - JOUR
T1 - Urban NO2-pollution and health outcomes
T2 - Evidence from a natural experiment in Italy on the simulated benefits of the EU zero-emission-vehicles resolution
AU - Bondonio, Daniele
AU - Chirico, Paolo
AU - Piacenza, Massimiliano
AU - Robbiano, Simone
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025/9
Y1 - 2025/9
N2 - Background: The EU “Fit-For-55″ resolution provisions the banning of fossil-fuel-vehicle sales beyond 2035, sparking a heated debate due to its uncertain effectiveness in reducing CO2 emissions globally. Nevertheless, the EU shift towards zero-emission vehicles has the potential to decrease urban nitrogen dioxide (NO2) pollution that is closely linked to respiratory and cardiovascular diseases and to increased mortality. Objective: This paper aims to simulate the impact that the EU zero-emission-mobility policy is expected to have, post-transitional period, on urban NO2 and health outcomes. Methods: The analysis exploits some unique features of Northern-Italy air-pollution data and the Italian Covid-19 lockdown that is leveraged as a natural experiment to mimic the fossil-fuel traffic abatement expected by the policy. Our estimates are obtained by developing a novel intertemporal-statistical-matching approach specifically suited for quasi-experimental evaluations in the context of air-pollution multivariate time series. Results: We find that the lockdown led to a mean NO2 reduction of 13.62 μg/m³ (53 % from a baseline of 25.8 μg/m³), translating into a simulated reduction in the relative risk of total, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality by 8.3, 7.5 and 3.8 percentage points, respectively. We also estimate impact heterogeneity, with log-linearly larger reductions in NO2 and mortality risk at higher baseline-pollution levels. Conclusions: These results imply that the EU zero-emission mobility policy is expected to improve air-quality and public health in urban areas with high traffic density, though benefits may vary across regions due to differences in meteorological conditions and urban/orographic characteristics, supporting a spatially differentiated policy implementation.
AB - Background: The EU “Fit-For-55″ resolution provisions the banning of fossil-fuel-vehicle sales beyond 2035, sparking a heated debate due to its uncertain effectiveness in reducing CO2 emissions globally. Nevertheless, the EU shift towards zero-emission vehicles has the potential to decrease urban nitrogen dioxide (NO2) pollution that is closely linked to respiratory and cardiovascular diseases and to increased mortality. Objective: This paper aims to simulate the impact that the EU zero-emission-mobility policy is expected to have, post-transitional period, on urban NO2 and health outcomes. Methods: The analysis exploits some unique features of Northern-Italy air-pollution data and the Italian Covid-19 lockdown that is leveraged as a natural experiment to mimic the fossil-fuel traffic abatement expected by the policy. Our estimates are obtained by developing a novel intertemporal-statistical-matching approach specifically suited for quasi-experimental evaluations in the context of air-pollution multivariate time series. Results: We find that the lockdown led to a mean NO2 reduction of 13.62 μg/m³ (53 % from a baseline of 25.8 μg/m³), translating into a simulated reduction in the relative risk of total, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality by 8.3, 7.5 and 3.8 percentage points, respectively. We also estimate impact heterogeneity, with log-linearly larger reductions in NO2 and mortality risk at higher baseline-pollution levels. Conclusions: These results imply that the EU zero-emission mobility policy is expected to improve air-quality and public health in urban areas with high traffic density, though benefits may vary across regions due to differences in meteorological conditions and urban/orographic characteristics, supporting a spatially differentiated policy implementation.
KW - Air-pollution
KW - EU zero-emission-mobility policy
KW - Health effects
KW - Impact heterogeneity
KW - Intertemporal statistical matching
KW - NO abatement
KW - Relative risk of mortality
KW - Urban areas
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105008544659
U2 - 10.1016/j.healthpol.2025.105376
DO - 10.1016/j.healthpol.2025.105376
M3 - Article
SN - 0168-8510
VL - 159
JO - Health Policy
JF - Health Policy
M1 - 105376
ER -