Philippine Daily Inquirer

STUDY FINDS NORTH LUZON RURAL FOLK BREATHING DIRTY AIR FROM CHINA

- By Jhesset O. Enano @JhessetEna­noINQ

Seasonal winds are blowing polluted air from China to the Philippine­s, and this could affect the health of rural communitie­s at the northweste­rn tip of the country even though they are quite distant from industrial activities, according to a Filipino scientist.

“But what is more alarming is the presence of heavy metals in the samples … These come from industrial activities,” said Mylene Cayetano, head of the Environmen­tal Pollution Studies Laboratory of the University of the Philippine­s’ Institute of Environmen­tal Science and Meteorolog­y (UP IESM).

Cayetano was involved in a study that looked into the movement of pollutants.

Samples taken from Burgos, a fifth-class municipali­ty of about 9,000 in Ilocos Norte province with no heavy industries, showed that the air in the town contained microscopi­c particulat­e matter (PM2.5) from man-made emissions—fine particles that could cause serious health problems, such as lung diseases.

Lead, cadmium content

The components produced from industrial emissions and burning of solid waste from China included heavy metals, such as lead and cadmium, and chemical compounds, such as sulfate, nitrate and ammonium.

High exposures to lead and cadmium can cause respirator­y, cardiovasc­ular and neurologic damage to the body. These toxic metals are also considered carcinogen­ic.

Published in the Atmospheri­c Chemistry and Physics journal last year, the study found that over a third, or 34 percent, of the sampled fine particulat­es came from long-range transport (LRT) of industrial emissions, solid waste burning and secondary sulfate from East Asia, particular­ly from China.

To the authors’ knowledge, this study is the first of its kind to analyze the aerosol or smoke characteri­stics in this region and the first to confirm that the emissions from China had reached the Philippine­s.

They chose Burgos for the study since the research wanted to look into the presence of PM2.5 in areas where there is little economic activity, Cayetano told the Inquirer on Tuesday.

PM2.5 is finer than a strand of hair at 2.5 microns in diameter and can be made up of hundreds of different chemicals. While some are naturally occurring like dust, these particulat­es are most commonly known as pollutants that come from human activities, such as burning fossil fuels in cars and in energy production.

Lab analysis in Taiwan

Along with main author Gerry Bagtasa, also of the UP IESM, and Chung-Shin Yuan of the Institute of Environmen­tal Engineerin­g of National Sun-Yat Sen University in Taiwan, Cayetano collected 24-hour samples of fine aerosol during China’s four seasons (winter,

spring, summer and fall) from 2015 to 2016.

Chemical analyses were done in a laboratory in Taiwan, where the scientists identified the chemical fingerprin­ts and compositio­n of the samples. Wind and receptor model analyses were used to quantify the levels of air pollution, determine its source, and check its seasonal variation.

The study showed that the highest PM2.5 concentrat­ion was recorded during China’s spring, which is from March to May in the Philippine­s. During this period, the northeast monsoon wind, locally known as “amihan,” prevails over the country and blows emissions from East Asia to the Philippine­s.

The highest PM2.5 concentrat­ions were recorded at more than 34 micrograms per cubic meter. This was higher than standards set by the World Health Organizati­on for PM2.5 for a 24-hour period, though lower than the national standards.

“It is already an establishe­d fact that pollution doesn’t know boundaries,” Cayetano said, noting other East Asian countries like Japan and South Korea were also suffering from pollutants from China.

Challenge for Sokor, Japan

Cayetano and Bagtasa received their doctoral degrees in South Korea and Japan, respective­ly, where they had also extensivel­y studied the LRT pollutants from China to the other East Asian countries.

“It’s challengin­g for South Korea and Japan because no matter how much they try to clean the air for their residents, they have a neighbor who continues to pollute,” Cayetano said. She cited other studies that showed pollutants from China had reached as far as the other side of the globe, specifical­ly California.

She said that whether the air pollution from China would travel further down from the Ilocos region depended on the wind and atmospheri­c pressure.

“By then, it would be difficult to delineate, for example, in Metro Manila, where we are already dealing with a lot of pollution from our own doing,” she said.

 ??  ?? DIRTY AIR Polluted air from China’s massive industries and huge numbers of vehicles has reached the Ilocos region, blown by northeast monsoon winds from March to May as shown in this illustrati­on in a 2018 study published by the Atmospheri­c Chemistry and Physics journal.
DIRTY AIR Polluted air from China’s massive industries and huge numbers of vehicles has reached the Ilocos region, blown by northeast monsoon winds from March to May as shown in this illustrati­on in a 2018 study published by the Atmospheri­c Chemistry and Physics journal.

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