Liton Chakraborty, PhD, MSc, MA
Policy Analyst/Advisor @ ESDC | Adjunct Faculty Member to Graduate Program in DEM @ York University | CRRG Researcher @ University of Waterloo

April 29, 2025

Assessing the environmental justice implications of seismic risk in Ottawa-Gatineau and Montreal metropolitan areas

April 2025

Liton Chakraborty
Jennifer A. Spinney
Daniele Malomo
Jason Thistlethwaite
Kasra Motlaghzadeh
Mohammad Sina Jahangir
Daniel Henstra
Andrews, Sheldon
Bora Pulatsu

This study investigates distributive environmental injustices in seismic risk exposure across urban areas of Ottawa-Gatineau and Montreal, testing the hypothesis that socially vulnerable communities face disproportionate seismic hazards. Using geographically aggregated data from Canada’s probabilistic seismic risk model and the 2021 national census, we examine spatial heterogeneity in the relationships between race/ethnicity, socioeconomic vulnerability, and seismic risk. Social vulnerability was measured through economic insecurity and neighbourhood instability indices. The study uses separate geostatistical models to assess spatial heterogeneity and endogeneity. To address potential endogeneity in global ordinary least squares regression, we apply two-stage least squares regression with instrumental variables (e.g., rural areas, dwelling density) for robust global estimates. Spatial variability has been assessed using multiscale geographically weighted regression for more localized insights. Bivariate local indicators of spatial association cluster mapping further identify risk hotspots and high-risk socioeconomically disadvantaged areas for targeted interventions and disaster risk reduction programs. Findings reveal that recent immigrants, seniors, lone-parent households, and visible minorities are significantly associated with seismic risk in both regions. In Montreal, higher risk correlates with populations living alone, low-income individuals, those without a high school diploma, and non-official language speakers. In Ottawa-Gatineau, seismic risk is more strongly linked to seniors, visible minorities, and lone-parent families. Older housing consistently emerges as a critical built-environmental vulnerability. These results underscore the need for region-specific policies that integrate social and structural risk factors into disaster mitigation. The study contributes to environmental justice and social vulnerability literature, advocating for vulnerability-based risk management and targeted urban resilience strategies.

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