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Environmental justice, infrastructure provisioning, and environmental impact assessment: Evidence from the California Environmental Quality Act.

Authors :
Wang, Jie
Ulibarri, Nicola
Scott, Tyler A.
Davis, Steven J.
Source :
Environmental Science & Policy; Aug2023, Vol. 146, p66-75, 10p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Environmental impact assessment (EIA) is a decision support tool that analyzes the environmental and social impacts of infrastructure projects. This paper focuses on the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), a law requiring EIA use in California, to examine where new infrastructure is proposed and whether EIA can shape infrastructure distribution and environmental justice through the review process. We analyze the temporal and spatial distribution of more than 7000 infrastructure projects and their environmental impacts as proposed under CEQA from 2011 to 2020. Using fixed-effects negative binomial regression to model the association between the number of initiated projects and existing socioeconomic and environmental conditions by census tract, and multinomial logistic regression to investigate determinants of a project's level of environmental review, we find an unequal distribution of infrastructure. We find that socio-economically vulnerable communities and those with greater burden of environmental pollution are less likely to be the site of newly proposed infrastructure, but that proposed projects tend to be beneficial, less-polluting infrastructure like parks or schools that could help redress past injustices. Moreover, projects proposed in vulnerable communities are less likely to receive the most stringent reviews or have their impacts mitigated. These findings suggest that CEQA interacts with distributive justice in contradictory ways. They also highlight the need to separately consider environmental amenities versus harms such that EIA processes do not stand as a barrier to constructing beneficial infrastructure in environmental justice communities. • New and upgraded infrastructure helps overcome historic distributional injustices burdening poor, minority communities. • In California, new infrastructure is proposed less often in socioeconomically vulnerable and more polluted neighborhoods. • California's environmental impact assessment (EIA) law is inconsistently addressing distributional justice. • Projects proposed in less vulnerable communities likely receive more stringent EIA reviews and have their impacts mitigated. • EIA is not designed to consider environmental amenities and may limit beneficial infrastructure from redressing past harms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14629011
Volume :
146
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Environmental Science & Policy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164111141
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2023.05.003