Oil and gas industry linked to thousands of yearly US deaths and preterm births, study finds
Air pollution from oil and gas activities is responsible for an estimated 91,000 deaths and over 10,000 preterm births in the US each year, according to a new study that examined the impacts of the industry through its lifecycle from extraction to refining to burning fuel in power plants.The study, published August 22 in the journal Science
Advances, also attributes an estimated 216,000 annual incidences of US
childhood asthma to air pollutants from fossil fuels, as well as over 1,600
lifetime cancers.
California, Texas, New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey
have the highest total health burden from all stages of oil and gas production
and use, according to the study, with racial minorities facing disproportionate
exposure to harmful air pollutants that include fine particulate matter, ozone
and nitrogen dioxide.
The findings, based on data from 2017, likely underestimate the health toll of the US oil and gas lifecycle, the authors said, given annual production increased by 40% from 2017 to 2023 and consumption increased by about 8%.
“Every day, new peer-reviewed evidence emerges demonstrating
the level of harm the petrochemical industry causes,” Heather McTeer Toney,
executive director of the nonprofit Beyond Petrochemicals, said in a statement.
“Faced with this data, I can’t imagine how a government official at any level
could support building more petrochemical plants.”
Previous studies have focused on air pollution from a single
stage of the oil and gas lifecycle, a single air pollutant, or a specific
region, according to the study authors.
The findings come after the Trump administration launched
what the US EPA in March called the “biggest deregulatory action in US history,” with a
particular focus on easing regulations “throttling the oil and gas industry.”

The Environmental Defense Fund, the Center for Biological
Diversity and other nonprofits this week filed a motion asking a federal court to stop the move to
delay these limits on pollution from oil and gas operations.
“Rather than hold Big Oil accountable for its pollution, the
Trump administration is forcing people to breathe dangerous chemicals and
suffer the harms of an overheating climate,” Maggie Coulter, an attorney at the
Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law Institute, said in a statement.
Even as the federal government moves to roll back and delay
air pollution protections, states still have the option to implement their own
stricter regulations, including more stringent permitting requirements and
pollution control rules, said Buonocore.
“Power plants, any of those kinds of things, these are
things that the state has some say over ….,” he said. “States have the ability
to set their own regulations that go above and beyond the federal floor.”
Buonocore and colleagues concluded in a 2023 study that oil and gas production is responsible
for $77 billion in annual health costs – about three times the cost of climate
impacts from the industry’s methane emissions. The industry impacted health in
cities with little or no oil and gas activity, including Washington, DC, New
York City and Chicago, according to the study.
Over half of US counties lack a single federally-monitored
air quality station, with more than 50 million Americans living in “air quality
monitoring deserts,” according to a study published in April.