Jamaica Gleaner

Jamaica choking

JET calls for action on air pollution

- Ryon Jones Staff Reporter

THE JAMAICA Environmen­t Trust (JET) is calling on the regulatory bodies with responsibi­lity for air quality in Jamaica to carry out their duties.

JET is also requesting that Prime Minister Andrew Holness, who is the minister of the environmen­t, take immediate steps to address Jamaica’s worsening air quality and give the issue the priority it deserves.

JET’s CEO Diana McCaulay’s appeal comes in wake of an article published in the February 5 edition of The Sunday Gleaner titled ‘Pollution crisis – Portmore residents with respirator­y illnesses urged to flee foul community’. But the issue of pollution is not limited to Portmore, as air quality has been deteriorat­ing in the Kingston Metropolit­an Area, with data from the National Environmen­t and Planning Agency (NEPA) showing that the air quality in areas such as Spanish Town Road, Mona and

Rockfort declined to the worst ever readings in 2015.

According to McCaulay, along with the Ministry of Health, NEPA, and the National Solid Waste Management Authority, all have some responsibi­lity for the issue.

“The public-health threat of open burning remains unaddresse­d by NEPA, the National Solid Waste Management Authority, or the Ministry of Health,” McCaulay charged in a release to the media yesterday.

“The main sources of air pollution in Jamaica are industrial, motor vehicle emissions; open burning by individual­s and businesses, garbage dumps, and forest or bush fires. Despite many meetings, reports and promises over two decades, little progress has been made in controllin­g these sources.”

McCaulay further highlighte­d that Jamaica has no motor vehicle emission standards, and while we do have air-quality regulation­s for major and significan­t facilities as defined by law, these facilities (mainly industrial) are required to do their own testing for a number of pollutants (depending on the industry) and report those tests to NEPA.

“Except for particulat­es, NEPA does not have the equipment to do independen­t testing for the criteria pollutants (for which there are air quality standards), let alone the 78 priority pollutants (for which there are guideline levels) identified in the air-quality regulation­s,” McCaulay said. “NEPA does not proactivel­y release informatio­n on air quality in a form that is understand­able by a layperson so it is not easy for a citizen to find out what he or she is breathing.”

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