Abstract

Can green vegetation absorb air pollutants and control regional air pollution? The existing research has not reached a consistent conclusion on this issue. Using the multi-level data in China, this paper provides empirical evidence of the causal impact of greenspace on PM2.5 through the abundant fixed effect and controls. Besides, this paper applied the soil humidity, Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) last month, NDVI in the same month last year, and NDVI prefecture-level city average as the instrumental variables, respectively, to test the robustness of the estimation. The results show that increased greenspace significantly decreases the PM2.5 concentration and other air pollutants. In further analysis, we found that the decreasing effect turns significant when NDVI exceeds 0.3. In addition, there are regional heterogeneities in the impact of greenspace on air pollution. Greenspaces show a more pronounced air pollution reduction effect in southern or higher administrative-level cities. This paper suggests that increasing greenspace is an economical and effective way to achieve co-management of multiple air pollutants.

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