Valuing air quality impacts using stated choice analysis: trading off visibility against morbidity effects.

Luis Ignacio Rizzi, Cristóbal De La Maza, Luis Abdón Cifuentes, Jorge Gómez
Author Information
  1. Luis Ignacio Rizzi: Departamento de Ingeniería de Transporte y Logística, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Casilla 306, Cod. 105, Santiago 22, Chile. Electronic address: lir@ing.puc.cl.
  2. Cristóbal De La Maza: Department of Engineering and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon University, 5000 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA. Electronic address: cdelamaz@andrew.cmu.edu.
  3. Luis Abdón Cifuentes: Departamento de Ingeniería Industrial y de Sistemas, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile. Electronic address: lac@ing.puc.cl.
  4. Jorge Gómez: Ministerio del Medio Ambiente, Gobierno de Chile, Chile. Electronic address: jgomez@mma.gob.cl.

Abstract

Direct valuation of air quality has as a drawback; that estimated willingness to pay figures cannot be apportioned to the several environmental goods affected by air quality, such as mortality and morbidity effects, visibility, outdoor recreation, among others. To address this issue, we implemented a survey in Santiago de Chile to identify component values of confounded environmental services by means of a choice experiment. We designed a survey where two environmental goods, a morbidity health endpoint and improved visibility, had to be jointly traded off against each other and against money in a unified framework. The health endpoint is a respiratory illness that results in an emergency room visit with a probability of hospitalization being required for appropriate treatment. Visibility is described as an aesthetic effect related to the number of days per year of high visibility. Modeling comprises both a logit model with covariates and a mixed-logit model. The results suggest that the health endpoint midpoint value is in a range from USD 2,800 to USD 13,000, mainly depending on the model and age stratum. The mid point value of an extra day of high visibility per year ranges from USD 281,000 to USD 379,000.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Adult
Aged
Air Pollution
Child
Chile
Choice Behavior
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Data Collection
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Models, Theoretical
Respiratory Tract Diseases

Word Cloud

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