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Mélanie Gittard (PSAE, PSE, CIRED)

Publié le 26 janvier 2024 Mis à jour le 31 janvier 2024
Date
Le 30 janvier 2024 De 12:15 à 13:15
Lieu(x)
Pôle Tertiaire - Site La Rotonde - 26 avenue Léon Blum - 63000 Clermont-Ferrand
Salle 212

Séminaire recherche. MiningLeaks: Water Pollution and Child Mortality in Africa

MiningLeaks: Water Pollution and Child Mortality in Africa


Mélanie Gittard
Paris Saclay Applied Economics (PSAE)
Paris School of Economics and CIRED

Coautrice : Irène Hu

Résumé

In the midst of Africa’s mining boom, communities downstream from industrial mines face increased exposure to toxic waste. Yet, the effects of induced water pollution on the local population’s health have not been quantified at the scale of Africa, due to data limitation and nonrandom exposure. This paper investigates this question using a quasi-experimental design and a novel dataset detailing the location and opening dates of all known industrial mines, obtained through intensive manual data collection. We combine geo-coded information on 2,016 industrial mines with health outcomes from the Demographic Health Survey (DHS) from 1986 to 2018 in 26 African countries. Through a staggered difference-in-difference strategy, we compare villages downstream and upstream of mines before and after opening and find a 25% increase in 24-month mortality rates downstream. The effect is mainly observed among children no longer breastfed, confirming that water pollution drives the results. Our analysis rules out other mechanisms such as fertility changes, access to facilities, in-migration, conflicts and income effects. The impact intensifies during mine operation and high international mineral prices, especially in densely mined regions, and fades out with distance. From a public policy perspective, this paper underscores the significant local costs of mine openings on the environment and the health of the surrounding populations.

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