Pollution Hurts Plants Too
Air pollution has profound effects on human health, but it also affects other living organisms. In a recently published paper, Kostas Metaxoglou and I show how reductions in pollution from power plants has increased corn and soybean yields.
Agricultural productivity in the United States has grown substantially in the past 100 years. Farmers produce four times as much output from each unit of land, and 17 times as much output from each unit of labor, as they did a century ago. Of the major crops, average corn yield increased eightfold and average soybean yield increased fivefold over this period.
However, the rate of growth has slowed recently, which raises questions about how the world will meet the growing demand for agricultural products caused by increases in global population and wealth.
In the past decade, the amount of coal used for electricity generation in the U.S. has decreased by more than a third. It has been replaced by technologies that emit less pollution—mostly natural gas, but also wind and other renewables.
In addition, pollution from the remaining coal-fired power plants declined substantially over the same period due to adoption of abatement technology.
Kostas and I quantify the crop yield increases attributed to reductions in the emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) from electric power plants. Large amounts of NOx emissions from coal-fired power plants react with volatile organic compounds in the presence of sunlight to produce ozone. High ground-level ozone in the summer slows photosynthesis and thereby reduces crop production per acre (yield).
We use a panel-data econometric approach to quantify the effects of NOx emissions on crop yields. In particular, we estimate regression models to answer the following question: if power plants within a specified radius of an average county centroid reduce total NOx emissions during the growing season, how much do we expect the crop yield to increase in that county, all else equal?
Using data for 2003–13, we estimate that average corn yield increased by 2.46% and soybean yield by 1.62% in response to the observed changes in power plant NOx emissions over the 8-year period from 2003–05 to 2011–13. The estimated yield increases vary substantially across states depending on the change in NOx emissions. For corn, they range from 0.32% to 6.87%, and for soybeans they range from 0.21% to 4.30%.
Our results are similar to those recently published by David Lobell and Jennifer Burney, who study four key pollutants: ozone (O3), particulate matter (PM), sulfur dioxide (SO2), and nitrogen dioxide (NO2). They find that cleaner air has contributed 20% of the yield gains in corn and soybeans since 1999.
Our estimated yield improvements translate into an increase in total annual surplus of $1.60 billion, $1.07 billion of which are attributed to corn. Low elasticities imply a substantial decrease in price due to the rightward shift of the crop supply curves, so this productivity increase makes consumers better off and farmers worse off. We estimate an increase in consumer surplus by $3.77 billion and a decrease in producer surplus by $2.17 billion. Additionally, there is a decrease in farmers’ revenue equal to $2.62 billion.
Citation: Productivity Spillovers from Pollution Reduction: Reducing Coal use Increases Crop Yields. Metaxoglou, K.; and Smith, A. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 102(1): 259-280. 2020.
Links: Paper Replication files UC ANR blog EE News article
Addendum (7/23/21): Pollution doesn't always hurt plants. Nick Sanders and Alan Berreca show in a recent paper that reducing sulfur dioxide emissions from power plants caused crop yields to go down. Sulfur is an important nutrient for crop growth, so when the acid rain program removed sulfur from the air, it reduced the amount available to crops. The acid rain program had large benefits overall, but it had detrimental effects on crop yields.