It’s Time for Parents to Step Up in the Fight for Clean Air

Fossil fuel pollution is impacting the most vulnerable among us: children. Their future—and health—are at stake.
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Illustration: Ayumi Takahashi (TAAK)

In 1981, less than a month after evidence of global warming was first reported on its front page, the The New York Times asked B. F. Skinner about the fate of humanity. The famous psychologist had recently argued that a feature of the human mind virtually guaranteed global environmental disaster. “Why do we not act to save our world?” Skinner asked, citing myriad threats to the planet.

His answer: Human behavior is governed almost entirely by our experiences—specifically, by which actions have been rewarded or punished in the past. The future, having not yet happened, will never have the same influence over what we do; we will seek familiar rewards today—money, comfort, security, pleasure, power—even when doing so threatens everyone on the planet tomorrow.

Skinner was one of the most influential thinkers of the 20th century, yet he rarely gets credit for the prescience of this warning, which predicted the behavior of fossil fuel executives and politicians for the next four decades. I have wrestled with it often. I am a pediatrician in Reno, Nevada, the fastest-warming city in the US. I look into the eyes of babies, children, and teens every day. Skinner argued that only when the consequences of environmental destruction moved from “tomorrow” to “today” would our choices change. I believe that in 2025, the harms to children will become so clear and immediate that parents—the sleeping giant in the climate fight—will wake up to what the fossil fuel industry has done.

Over the past decade, for example, my city has been darkened for ever-longer stretches by wildfire smoke from California; 65 million Americans, mostly in the West, now experience such “smoke crises.” Everyone understands that smoke causes respiratory problems; all of us cough and wheeze when the air becomes hazardous for weeks at a time. Fewer understand that children are at more risk from these events for multiple reasons, mostly related to their different physiology, small size, and immature organs—which, because they are still developing, are very vulnerable to environmental injury. Children’s lungs, for example, are literally shaped by the quality of air they breathe. Children who chronically inhale particle pollution—such as those living in the most-polluted neighborhoods of Los Angeles—tend to develop smaller, stiffer lungs.

In 2025, the media will realize that harms from these tiny pollutants are even more profound. That’s because a growing body of science shows that fine and ultrafine particles, usually bound to toxic chemicals and heavy metals in wildfire smoke and exhaust, are causing brain injuries in children. Alarmingly, they appear to be contributing to the epidemic-like rise of autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), as well as increasing the odds of learning disability, behavior issues, and later dementia.

Why? Because these tiny pollutants don’t stop at the lungs; they invade the bloodstream and penetrate other organs, including the brain—which, like the lungs, is still growing and developing in a child, and thus more susceptible to harm.

The evidence of particles’ neurologic impacts comes from brain imaging, histology, and epidemiology. We know that even before birth, particles inhaled by pregnant women can cross the placenta and injure the fetus; MRI studies in several countries have shown altered brain architecture in prenatally exposed children, many of whom struggled with cognition and behavior. After birth, particles can also penetrate the prefrontal cortex—the part of the brain behind the forehead—after being inhaled through the nose. When scientists studied the brains of children and young adults in Mexico City, notorious for its bad air, they found fossil fuel particles, encased in Alzheimer’s-like plaques, embedded in the prefrontal cortex.

Evidence of a link to autism and ADHD has emerged in more than a decade of epidemiological studies from around the world. In a multiyear study of almost 300,000 children from Southern California, for example, prenatal exposure to PM2.5 (the smallest particle regulated by law) was found to significantly increase autism rates. And a recent study of over 164,000 children in China found that long-term exposure to fine particles boosted the odds of ADHD. Though autism and ADHD are complex disorders with multiple causes both genetic and environmental, it is increasingly clear that air pollution—caused by fossil fuels and worsening due to climate change—is a significant risk factor.

Most of the parents in my clinic—who lovingly buckle their children into car seats, brush their teeth, and bring them in for check-ups and vaccines—don’t know this. But I have spent countless hours with parents worried about autism. When they understand that the nearby coal-fired power plant or exhaust from their car or the explosion of climate-fueled wildfires can wound their child’s mind, I believe many will demand clean energy in their homes, schools, jobs, and communities.

Air pollution won’t be the only climate-related threat directly affecting their children and driving a wave of activism. In the US and other developed countries, parents will realize that summer activities they enjoyed in childhood must now be limited because of heat. In developing countries such as India and Mexico, heat’s health impact will be far greater. Only 5 percent  of homes in India and 16 percent of those in Mexico currently have air conditioning, compared to 90 percent in the US. The toll of this year’s heat waves in those countries will be heartbreaking: higher rates of pregnancy complications and maternal death, preterm birth, low birth weight, and infant mortality. In 2025, the media will start to cover these tragedies in a new way, clearly describing them as a crime and pointing to the corporations and politicians responsible.

Skinner worried that our reaction to environmental catastrophe would come too late to avert it. But he did not anticipate that solutions like renewable energy could bring greater rewards, in immediate costs and benefits, than fossil fuels. Or that parents might come to see solar panels, heat pumps, and home insulation as this generation’s equivalent of the polio vaccine—something they demand to protect their children.

We think of climate change as a global problem. But it is in fact a very personal problem, multiplied many times. It is a threat to the people we love most: the children we hold in our arms and promise to keep safe. When the price that children are paying on behalf of fossil fuel corporations is right in front of us, parents—the great untapped voice in the climate fight—will lead a furious and rapid transition to a sustainable world.