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15976


Date: March 27, 2019 at 12:21:01
From: Alan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: U.S. Air Pollution Is “Completely Outrageous”

URL: https://www.nrdc.org/experts/juanita-constible/us-air-pollution-completely-outrageous-1


Instead of getting distracted by 5G / vaccines / Flat Earth and other woo I
wish CT folk would pay concern to what's actually proven to be a health
hazard right under and up their noses.


How do you think the United States stacks up against other countries for
protecting its citizens from the health threats of air pollution?

That’s the question Christiana Figueres, one of the world’s leading
climate warriors, posed at last week’s Global Climate and Health Forum,
an official side event of the Global Climate Action Summit. The answer,
said Ms. Figueres, is “completely outrageous.”

The United States is one of the richest countries in the world, has the
highest per capita spending on health care, and has an effective federal
clean air law. But when it comes to avoiding sicknesses and deaths due
to air pollution, we are ranked #23 in the world. In 2016, the American
population lost 516 years of disease- and disability-free life per 100,000
people. That’s more than double the rate found in top-ranked New
Zealand, and only marginally better than countries like Honduras (#26)
and Nicaragua (#28).

Air Pollution is Dangerous

Most air pollution-related deaths and illnesses are caused by fine particle
pollution, known more formally as “fine particulate matter” or PM2.5.
Fine particles can lodge deep in the lungs and get into the bloodstream.
This form of pollution has been linked to a wide array of health effects,
including premature deaths, asthma attacks, heart attacks, lung cancer,
preterm births, autism, and dementia.

Here’s the latest available information (2014) on the sources of fine
particle pollution in the United States:

About 77 percent is from power plants and other industrial processes;

About 10 percent is from the transportation sector; and

More than 16 percent is from wildfire smoke.

Thanks to federal and state pollution limits, levels of fine particles have
declined across the United States since the 1990s, increasing life
expectancy along the way. But that progress is in jeopardy thanks to the
Trump administration’s attack on our lungs.

In just the last 6 weeks, the Environmental Protection Agency and Bureau
of Land Management have proposed to weaken or roll back three key
public health safeguards directly limiting particle pollution: the Clean
Power Plan, clean car rules, and methane standards for the oil and gas
industry. These safeguards also indirectly cut particle pollution by
fighting climate change—which is fueling larger wildfires and more
unhealthy wildfire smoke.

Wildfires are Getting Worse

As Michael St. John, Battalion Chief with the fire department in Mill
Valley, California, put it at another Summit event:

"There's no doubt it's warmer and drier, and the fires are moving much
more ferociously than in the past."

Wildfire smoke increased fine particle pollution in the U.S. Northwest
from 1988 to 2016, even as levels of that pollution declined in the rest of
the country. Last month, fires in the Northwest produced so much
particle pollution that air quality in Seattle, Washington was regularly
worse than Beijing's.

Future increases in area burned and number of wildfire days fueled by
climate change are expected to likewise increase particle pollution in the
West and the Southeast. And as concentrations of wildfire smoke
increase, Americans will face more hospital admissions and premature
deaths from respiratory ailments and other causes.

Trump and his allies in Congress aren’t just advancing policies that will
increase air pollution. They’re also systematically increasing the kinds of
income and health care disparities that amp up the already
disproportionate threat of air pollution to lower-income people and some
communities of color. The prevalence of asthma, for example, is 1.6 times
higher among African-American children than in white children, and the
rates of hospitalizations and death from asthma are 3 times higher.

Wanted: Climate Action

The administration’s giveaways to big polluters and inaction on climate
change directly contradicts commitments made by the businesses,
health professionals, city and state leaders, philanthropies, and others at
the Global Climate Action Summit last week to reduce pollution and
increase resilience to the present-day effects of climate change. Back at
the Health Forum, former Chilean President Ricardo Lagos noted how
odd it was that event organizers had to invite someone from a small
country like his to give advice to the U.S. government. He also
recognized that climate action can have some political costs, but said:

“A president, my goodness, cannot think about the next election. A
president has to think about the next generation.”

Want to remind President Trump that it's outrageous to roll back health
and safety standards?


Responses:
[15980]


15980


Date: March 27, 2019 at 13:03:31
From: pamela, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: U.S. Air Pollution Is “Completely Outrageous”


Yes, and he is also a big supporter of 5g and all wireless contraptions. Roundup, Monsanto/Bayer, mercury in vaccines, etc. Polluting water and air, polluting people, animals, birds, fish, land all for the sake of big money. All of it. That's the bottom line. EPA and other so called protectors of the environment in bed with big money for YEARS.


Responses:
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