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Impact of truck electrification on air pollution disparities in the United States

Author

Listed:
  • Wilson H. McNeil

    (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    University of California
    University of Canterbury)

  • Jason Porzio

    (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    University of California)

  • Fan Tong

    (Beihang University
    Beihang University
    Peking University Ordos Research Institute of Energy)

  • Robert A. Harley

    (University of California)

  • Maximilian Auffhammer

    (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    University of California
    National Bureau of Economic Research)

  • Corinne D. Scown

    (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    Joint BioEnergy Institute
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    University of California)

Abstract

Electrifying heavy-duty trucks reduces on-road diesel emissions but shifts the burden of supplying energy to power-generation facilities. The combined effect of Inflation Reduction Act investments in grid decarbonization and truck electrification will alter the magnitude and distribution of air pollution burdens across the United States. These investments are intended to facilitate a just energy transition, with 40% of the benefits flowing to disadvantaged communities per the Justice40 Initiative. Here we evaluate the combined effects of Inflation Reduction Act grid decarbonization and truck electrification investments on a national scale to determine whether the air pollution benefits would meet this 40% goal for both disadvantaged communities and the most exposed racial–ethnic groups. We find that truck electrification and decarbonization reduce air-pollution-related premature mortality in disadvantaged communities. However, the relative disparity between disadvantaged and non-disadvantaged communities increases, suggesting that a disproportionate share of benefits accrue to non-disadvantaged communities. Whereas absolute disparity in grid emissions decreases over time for all racial–ethnic groups, relative disparity remains largely unchanged, with Black populations being the most exposed. Electrifying drayage corridors would result in comparatively large health benefits for disadvantaged communities, suggesting that increasing targeted electrification investments in short-haul routes near urban areas (for example, ports) could be promising.

Suggested Citation

  • Wilson H. McNeil & Jason Porzio & Fan Tong & Robert A. Harley & Maximilian Auffhammer & Corinne D. Scown, 2025. "Impact of truck electrification on air pollution disparities in the United States," Nature Sustainability, Nature, vol. 8(3), pages 276-286, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natsus:v:8:y:2025:i:3:d:10.1038_s41893-025-01515-x
    DOI: 10.1038/s41893-025-01515-x
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