Los Angeles Times

Trump casts pall on clean-air fight

Experts say state’s emissions regulation­s must stand

- By Tony Barboza

Southern California newspapers once routinely described the region’s air with words such as “strangling.” Breathing it, reporters noted, could be “agonizing.” As recently as the 1970s, a visitor standing in the foothills on many summer afternoons might not realize that the San Gabriel or San Bernardino mountains towered just above, hidden by a curtain of brown smog.

“You’d go swimming in the summertime and your lungs would be burning,” said Richard Frank, who directs the California Environmen­tal Law & Policy Center at UC Davis. He grew up in the San Fernando Valley and endured the horrible smog sieges that sickened people and cut lives short in 1950s Los Angeles.

State and local authoritie­s began attacking the problem in the ’40s. Inspectors prowled orange groves to moni- tor farmers’ efforts to fight frost with oil-burning smudge pots. They wrote tickets to people who burned trash in backyard incinerato­rs on the wrong days.

Then, in the ’50s, Caltech scientist Arie Jan Haagen-Smit proved that automobile tailpipes were the main source of smog.

This finding was inconvenie­nt for a region that had embraced cars as its prime mode of transporta­tion.

But gradually officials began winning victories in the battle against smog: lifting the pall, ending the Stage 3 smog alerts that used to shutter factories, schools and courtrooms, and making the air breathable again, if far from perfectly healthy.

But now smog fighters warn that President Trump, who Wednesday said his ad-

ministrati­on would re-examine national emission standards, seems ready to undermine California’s war against air pollution by limiting its power to set its own stricter rules.

“It’s the foundation for everything we’ve been able to accomplish,” said Mary Nichols, chairwoman of the California Air Resources Board. “It’s what’s enabled us to make the big inroads we’ve made in cutting smog. It’s what’s made us an internatio­nal leader in transporta­tion emissions.

“To reach both our air pollution and climate goals, California needs the ability to continue to push the auto industry to build cleaner cars,” Nichols said. “Any threat to that, even if it’s indirect, is of grave concern to us.”

Trump, in announcing the need for “common-sense changes,” said his team would review the Obama administra­tion’s greenhouse gas emissions standards, which would require cars to get an average of 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025.

“These standards are costly for automakers and the American people,” U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Scott Pruitt said in a statement, pledging to “take a fresh look to determine if this approach is realistic.”

California environmen­talists say the cost to public health makes aggressive standards well worth the price.

Unlike other parts of the country with coal-fired power plants, California’s air pollution is caused overwhelmi­ngly by motor vehicles and other “mobile” pollution sources regulated by the state and federal government­s. Cars, trucks and buses release about half the state’s smog-forming pollution and about 40% of its greenhouse gas emissions.

In 1966, California imposed the nation’s first tailpipe emission standard, and the fight grew more aggressive in the 1970s with rules requiring cars to have catalytic converters.

In the 1980s and ’90s came requiremen­ts for cleanerbur­ning gasoline and diesel and smog check programs to get gross polluters off the roads. More recently, California has adopted low-carbon fuel standards and mandates that automakers sell an increasing number of zero-emission cars.

Only by focusing on vehicle tailpipe emissions has California curbed the hazardous levels of air pollution that were common decades ago, said Frank, who worries that the move by the Trump administra­tion “would stunt and halt the tremendous progress we’ve made over the last 50 years.”

An analysis last year by the American Thoracic Society found that about 3,600 California­ns die prematurel­y each year from polluted air, more than onethird of the nationwide total. Most of those fatalities occur in Southern California, where a 2010 study found that air pollution contribute­s to as many early deaths as traffic accidents.

In the 1970s and ’80s, Southern California often saw more than 200 bad-air days a year, with ozone levels exceeding 300 parts per billion on the smoggiest summer days. Peak concentrat­ions of ozone are now about one-third of what they were, even as the population has grown and the number of vehicle miles traveled has doubled.

The last Stage 1 smog alert was in 2003. And recent research has measured significan­t gains in the health of the region’s children, whose lungs are growing bigger and stronger as air quality improves.

Despite decades of improvemen­ts, Southern California still has the nation’s highest levels of ozone and does not meet federal standards for fine particulat­e matter, or soot. And there are signs progress is slowing.

After seeing a jump in air pollution related to stagnant weather during the drought, the region in 2016 experience­d the worst summer smog season in years, with the highest ozone levels since 2009 and 132 bad-air days — up from 112 the previous year.

At the South Coast Air Quality Management District, which this month adopted a pollution-reduction plan, officials acknowledg­e that it will be impossible to clean smog to federal health standards over the next two decades without continued federal action and billions in government incentives to slash emissions from cars, trucks and other vehicles. They are counting on a massive transforma­tion to electric, fuel cell and other zero- and near-zero-emission technologi­es.

Frank said a rollback of vehicle emissions standards would frustrate those efforts by diminishin­g the government’s hand in prodding such innovation­s.

“It’s going to inhibit a transition to clean cars, allelectri­c cars and alternativ­e-powered vehicles,” he said. “Basically, if the Trump initiative goes forward, it’s going to change the longstandi­ng tradition in both Republican and Democratic administra­tions of the past to engage in technology-forcing regulation­s.”

‘To reach both our air pollution and climate goals, California needs the ability to continue to push the auto industry to build cleaner cars.’ — Mary Nichols, California Air Resources Board chairwoman

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? MIKE CHE photograph­s downtown L.A. on Christmas Eve. President Trump wants to re-examine national emissions standards, an effort that experts warn could damage decades of progress in California.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times MIKE CHE photograph­s downtown L.A. on Christmas Eve. President Trump wants to re-examine national emissions standards, an effort that experts warn could damage decades of progress in California.
 ?? Fitzgerald Whitney Los Angeles Times ?? A VEIL OF SMOG obscures the downtown Los Angeles skyline on Oct. 21, 1973.
Fitzgerald Whitney Los Angeles Times A VEIL OF SMOG obscures the downtown Los Angeles skyline on Oct. 21, 1973.
 ?? Tammy Lechner Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA IMPOSED the nation’s first tailpipe emission standard in 1966. The state’s battle to improve air quality continued into the 1970s, with rules requiring cars to have catalytic converters. Above, smog shrouds downtown Los Angeles buildings in...
Tammy Lechner Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA IMPOSED the nation’s first tailpipe emission standard in 1966. The state’s battle to improve air quality continued into the 1970s, with rules requiring cars to have catalytic converters. Above, smog shrouds downtown Los Angeles buildings in...

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