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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

The Behavioral Cost of Carbon

$4.11M USD

Funder OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR, NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH
Recipient Organization Columbia University Health Sciences
Country United States
Start Date Sep 18, 2024
End Date Jul 31, 2029
Duration 1,777 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10923510
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY The objective of this project is to generate the first empirical estimate of the behavioral cost of carbon – the human health-related behavioral impacts imposed by incremental increases in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The societal behavioral costs and benefits of climate stressors caused by GHG emissions remain

unknown in the US and globally. This missing behavioral component of the social cost of carbon (SCC) may blind both climate and health policy responses to the true scope of consequences from climate change. This project will evaluate three hypothesized behavioral costs of carbon. This proposal aims to 1) estimate the

first US domestic substance use cost of carbon by linking alcohol consumption observations and substance use panel data with high resolution meteorological data (i.e. weather and climate observations) across the US; 2) evaluate the US and global sleep cost of carbon by applying multi-stage multivariate time-series fixed effects

models to estimate associations between local meteorological conditions and both self-reported and actigraphy-recorded sleep outcomes; 3) assess the preliminary physical activity cost of carbon and estimate local climate-behavioral impact projections – statistically accounting for acclimatization – for every county in

the US and every region worldwide. In Aim 1, the US substance use cost of carbon will be derived from estimating climate – substance use response functions for daily household alcohol consumption measured by the nationally representative Nielsen-IQ Consumer Panel (NIQCP), self-reported individual substance use

registered by the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), and zip code-level counts of all substance use disorder emergency department visits (HCUP SEDD) and hospitalizations (HCUP SID) in a dataset that includes 95% of US hospital discharges. In Aim 2, US and global estimates of the sleep cost of

carbon will be derived from ambient temperature–sleep response estimates using nationally representative US time use survey data (ATUS) and globally extensive actigraphy data (GSSPAD). In Aim 3, nationally representative physical activity survey data (BRFSS) and two large-scale wrist actigraphy and

smartphone-based accelerometry datasets from prior research will be linked with global reanalysis (ECMWF ERA5) meteorological data to estimate climate – physical activity response curves which are then coupled with climate model output produced by NASA Earth Exchange (NEX) to inform both the US and global physical

activity cost of carbon. This independent research agenda will inform the world's first behavioral cost of carbon (BCC). The BCC will allow healthcare stakeholders and policymakers to anticipate and mitigate the future behavioral costs of societal emissions decisions. The proposed research directly responds to the NIH Strategic

Plan's 2021-2025 “disease prevention and health promotion” objective, aligns with the crosscutting themes by “addressing public health challenges across the lifespan” and “promoting collaborative science,” while also building cutting-edge spatial data science capacity at the nexus of climate change and behavioral medicine.

All Grantees

Columbia University Health Sciences

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