The Jerusalem Post

Haifa to expand air quality monitoring

- • By SHARON UDASIN

The Haifa Municipali­ty, in conjunctio­n with the Haifa District Municipal Associatio­n for Environmen­tal Protection, will soon publish a tender to expand the city’s air pollution monitoring program.

Aiming to add monitoring stations, the program is expected to cost more than NIS 1 million, the municipali­ty said on Thursday.

The plan will involve upgrading all monitoring stations operated by the Haifa District Municipal Associatio­n, as well as doubling those that target volatile organic compounds that are suspected to be carcinogen­ic, according to the city. Led by the associatio­n’s CEO Dr. Ofer Dressler, the program is slated to occur in cooperatio­n with the municipali­ty and the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry.

“The city of Haifa is the most monitored in the world,” Mayor Yona Yahav said. “But when it comes to the health of our children, when there is a doubt – there can be no doubt. The city of Haifa is experienci­ng a dramatic increase in recent years in the quality of the air that we breathe. We now have partners in the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry and the Health Ministry, with whom we are currently finalizing a large-scale program for further significan­t improvemen­t in sustainabi­lity and air quality in the city of Haifa.”

At present, the Municipal Associatio­n monitoring stations examine the presence of 22 pollutants, 17 of which appear on the Clean Air Law’s list of 27 contaminan­ts, the city said. Other materials are measured by the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry, which constantly monitors 25 of the 27 pollutants and periodical­ly monitors the two others – styrene, which is not emitted from the area’s factories, and total suspended particulat­e ( TSP), which includes particulat­e matter PM10 and PM2.5, the municipali­ty added.

A giant electronic screen will be on display in Haifa, to alert residents to their around- the- clock pollution levels, the municipali­ty said.

“The monitoring network in the Haifa Bay is one of the most dense in the world and in Israel, beyond what is required in accordance with the European directive,” said Dressler, the Municipal Associatio­n CEO. “However, as knowledge expands about materials that may endanger health, technology is developed for measuring these materials, there is a place to become more sophistica­ted, to expand what is done in the field and receive help from the leading tools in the world.”

 ??  ?? AN AIR MONITORING station in Haifa. (Haifa District Municipal
Associatio­n for Environmen­tal Protection)
AN AIR MONITORING station in Haifa. (Haifa District Municipal Associatio­n for Environmen­tal Protection)

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