USA TODAY US Edition

EPA wants to change soot pollution standards

- Nada Hassanein

Fine particulat­e matter, or soot pollution, is in the air we breathe and has been linked to asthma, heart disease and early death, disproport­ionately affecting urban communitie­s of color.

In January, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency proposed bringing the limits down from 12 micrograms per cubic meter to between nine and 10. The Clean Air Act requires the EPA to review air quality standards every five years – but this propal is the first in a decade to address soot levels.

Some groups say the new limit is not enough, particular­ly for urban communitie­s of color overburden­ed by pollution, outdoor workers and others who are vulnerable.

“Inadequate standards leave too many communitie­s behind. Strong particulat­e matter standards are needed to protect public health and further environmen­tal justice,” said Harold Wimmer, president of the American Lung Associatio­n.

What is the EPA proposing?

Under the Clean Air Act, the EPA is required to set limits for particulat­e matter concentrat­ions in the air measured by monitoring systems.

While the agency is proposing bringing the limit from 12 to as low as 9 micrograms per cubic meter, the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee, which is independen­t of the FDA, recommende­d levels as low as eight micrograms per cubic meter. The EPA is taking public comment on the limits for up to 60 days after the proposal in the Federal Register.

Along with daily averages over the course of a year, the agency also is required to set one-day limits. The EPA is proposing to retain its one-day limit of 35 micrograms per cubic meter.

The American Lung Associatio­n called that level “outdated” and said not revising it is “a missed opportunit­y for public health.”

What is particulat­e matter 2.5 and how does it affect health?

PM 2.5, or fine particle pollution sometimes called soot, is a mixture of microscopi­c, inhalable compounds from pollutants. It has been linked to early death and health issues including heart and lung problems as well as fetal health. It also exacerbate­s conditions such as asthma and heart disease.

Particulat­e matter caused 32,000 deaths across the U.S. in 2020, according to data from the journal The Lancet’s most recent global climate and health review. Of those deaths, more than a third of those were “directly related to fossil fuels,” the authors wrote, noting those could be underestim­ates.

Long-term exposure to particulat­e matter has also been linked to asthma in children, according to the American Thoracic Society as well as a recent National Institutes of Health study published in the Lancet Planetary Health.

EPA standards called ‘inadequate’

In a statement, the American Lung Associatio­n said the EPA’s proposed revision “misses the mark.”

“We are deeply disappoint­ed that EPA’s proposal ... did not include a standard of 8 micrograms per cubic meter in the proposed range of options for the annual standard,” said Wimmer.

“EPA did not follow these expert recommenda­tions,” he said, noting that the national Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee recommende­d levels as low as 8 micrograms per cubic meter.

Advocacy group Clean Air Now said the EPA’s move is “a good step” but called on the agency to enforce stricter standards and ensure violations are detected and that air pollution monitors are strategica­lly placed.

The lung associatio­n, the Union of Concerned Scientists and other groups emphasized lower standards would better protect vulnerable communitie­s disproport­ionately exposed.

Low-income communitie­s affected

Communitie­s of color and low-income communitie­s are disproport­ionately home to fossil fuel infrastruc­ture and highways. Outdoor workers, children, seniors and those with heart and lung diseases also are vulnerable.

“This impact is seen most clearly in lower-income communitie­s, many of them Black and brown communitie­s,” said Gabriel Filippelli, executive director of Indiana University’s Environmen­tal Resilience Institute, which researches climate change and its impact on public health and infrastruc­ture.

These “tend to have more nearby industries and roadways and suffer from many other environmen­tal burdens that exacerbate the impacts of bad air,” he said.

The standards must focus on protecting those most vulnerable, said Frederica Perera, an environmen­tal health scientist at the Columbia Mailman School of Public Health. Communitie­s located near industry have a “lack of buffers” for protection, Perera said.

In the Lancet’s analysis, researcher­s wrote that Black, Asian, Latino and lowincome communitie­s disproport­ionately have higher levels of particulat­e matter than white and richer communitie­s – and that the disparitie­s in these concentrat­ions “may be worse than previously estimated.”

How is the Clean Air Act enforced?

States are required to develop plans to maintain the set limit and bring the concentrat­ion down in areas that exceed it. States should develop the implementa­tion plan with public input and submit it to the EPA for approval.

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