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Long-term Effects of Redlining on Environmental Risk Exposure

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Abstract

Climate change exacerbates environmental risks such as intensifying extreme precipitation and heat events. Urban design, in turn, can further amplify these background climate stressors through the well-known urban heat island and rainfall effects, which are largely controlled by the local dominance of impervious land covers, surface roughness, and lack of mature tree canopy. While the extent to which present-day exposures and outcomes related to these climate-exacerbated environmental risks in urban areas can be linked to historical policies has received recent attention (Mujahid et al. 2021; Lane et al. 2022; Swope et al. 2022), causal inference within observed correlative associations has yet to be established. Here, we use a boundary design to estimate the persistent, causal effects of redlining on present-day exposure to climate change-exacerbated environmental risks in six large U.S. cities. Properties in areas assigned a lower-credit grade by the Home Owners' Loan Corporation in the 1930s have 3% higher exposure to flood risk and a 0.07◦F higher air temperature today compared to similar properties in higher-graded areas. We show that these differences are driven by lower tree canopy coverage and ground surface perviousness (important measures of environmental capital) in lower-graded areas. Our findings establish, for the first time, that the long-lasting effects of historical urban planning policies can be causally linked to present-day unequal exposures to climate risks.

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  • Claire Conzelmann & Jeremy Hoffman & Toan Phan & Arianna Salazar-Miranda, 2022. "Long-term Effects of Redlining on Environmental Risk Exposure," Working Paper 22-09R, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond.
  • Handle: RePEc:fip:fedrwp:95162
    DOI: 10.21144/wp22-09
    Note: Revised November 2022
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