Kabindra Shakya, PhD

Associate Professor of Environmental Science Villanova University

  • Villanova PA

Professor Kabindra Shakya, Ph.D. research on air pollution, heavy metal pollution in urban soils, and environmental justice issues.

Contact

Villanova University

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Media

Social

Areas of Expertise

Air Pollution
Particulate Matter
Environmental Justice
Lead Contamination in Soil

Biography

Dr. Shakya is an environmental scientist whose work encompasses investigating outdoor and indoor air quality in Philadelphia region, United States, and developing countries. His past work includes monitoring particulate matter, nitrogen oxides, ozone, and ammonia in Philadelphia region and Philadelphia subways, analyzing long term trends of indoor radon concentrations in Pennsylvania, and assessing soil lead exposures in community gardens across Pennsylvania. His interests include environmental health and environmental justice issues.

Education

Rice University

Ph.D.

Atmospheric Chemistry

2011

Affiliations

  • International Society of Exposure Science : Member, 2014 - Present
  • Upper Merion Environmental Advisory Council : Member, 2018 - Present
  • CCATE, Norristown : Board Member, 2021 - Present

Select Media Appearances

Air Pollution Inside Philly’s Subway is Much Worse Than on the Streets (Op-Ed)

The Conversation  online

2024-10-07

The air quality in the City Hall subway station in downtown Philadelphia is much worse than on the sidewalks directly above the station. That is a key finding of our new study published in the Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology.

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New York City Subway Riders are Breathing in Hazardous Air, Study Finds

The Guardian  online

2024-08-07

“Whatever pollutants that are brought from the outdoor air get trapped and recirculated,” said Kabindra Shakya, an assistant professor of geography and the environment at Villanova University who was not involved in the study. “Above ground, there is more chance for dispersion, wind speed carrying away and cleaning it, whereas it’s being accumulated [underground] with less ventilation.”

In 2020, Shakya and his team found that the level of air pollution in Philadelphia’s subway systems was roughly four times that of aboveground. They also found that stations with less direct outdoor access had higher concentrations of particulate matter.

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EPA sets stricter air emission rules for 3 Philly-area polluters and dozens of others nationwide

WHYY  online

2024-04-15

Advocates and experts view the rules as a win for environmental justice. People living near the facilities covered by the rules are disproportionately low-income or people of color, the EPA found. Most of the facilities that will fall under the new rules are in Louisiana or Texas.

“African American, minority communities are impacted disproportionately from this kind of pollution,” said Kabindra Shakya, a professor at Villanova University who studies air and soil pollution. “The risk for them hopefully will be reduced by this new rule.”

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Research Grants

Overbrook Breathe Right Community Air Monitoring Project

United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA)

2023 - 2025

Establishment of a community based participatory research (CBPR) program to manage lead exposure risks in a Hispanic neighborhood.

VERITAS Award (Villanova University)

2022 - 2024

AGILE grant to support visiting undergraduate student

Villanova University

Summer 2022 and 2023

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Select Academic Articles

Long term trend of particulate matter in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and its association with introduction of environmental policies

Discover Cities

2024

Since the 1970s, air quality has improved at the national level in the United States, coincident with the introduction of the Clean Air Act and other air pollution regulations at a greater frequency. We present a case study from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania—the sixth most populous city in the United States. The main objectives of this study are to analyze long-term trends of particulate matter (PM) from 1986 to 2021 in Philadelphia and to examine their association with the introduction of environmental policies relevant to air pollution at the federal, state, and local levels.

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Monitoring gaseous pollutants using passive sampling in the Philadelphia region

Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association

2023

Air pollution can have deleterious impacts on human health and the environment. Historically, air pollution studies have focused more on cities. However, it is also important to consider the impact on large suburban populations living closer to the major cities. In this study, nitrogen oxides (nitrogen dioxide and nitric oxide), sulfur dioxide, ozone, and ammonia concentrations were measured from fifteen sites in the Greater Philadelphia area, Pennsylvania, USA using Ogawa passive samplers from September 2021 to May 2022.

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Soil contamination in community gardens of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Environmental Monitoring and Assessment

2023

Community gardens have been seen sprouting up in and around urban settings such as Philadelphia and Pittsburgh over the past several decades. Due to the long histories of industrial activities and urbanization, these soils in urban regions may be at a high risk for various contaminants such as metals and metalloids. Using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), we measured 7 elements (lead (Pb), zinc (Zn), copper (Cu), vanadium (V), cadmium (Cd), nickel (Ni), and arsenic (As)) in soil samples collected from a total of 21 community gardens in Philadelphia City, Philadelphia suburban areas, and Pittsburgh City during September and October 2021.

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