Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Air quality in Chicago still poor

Report: City ranked second for worst pollution among major US cities in ’23

- By Adriana Pérez

Chicago ranked second among major U.S. cities with the worst air pollution in 2023, its average annual concentrat­ion of dangerous fine particulat­e matter almost three times global guidelines, according to a recent report. Even as national standards have tightened, pollution levels in the city still surpassed old regulation­s.

At one point last summer, Chicago had the poorest air quality recorded among 95 cities in the world. Experts say a major recurring issue and leading cause was pollutants carried by winds across borders and contaminat­ing air elsewhere — such as smoke from forest fires in the Canadian province of Quebec, which blew into Chicago and other U.S. cities.

“Wildfires in Canada devastated air quality, not only in Canada itself,” said Frank Hammes, global CEO of the Swiss air quality technology company IQAir. “But (they) caused a hazardous level of air quality in the United States, where multiple cities in the Midwest and Northeast saw significan­tly increased levels of polluted air.”

According to the U.S. EPA’s Region 5 office — which includes Illinois, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota and 35 tribal nations — the wildfire smoke that this portion of the country experience­d in 2023 was unpreceden­ted.

“Historical­ly, we have never seen anything like this in our region,” said Krista Thomason, a physical scientist with Region 5’s Air and Radiation Division, who participat­ed in a panel Wednesday on Midwestern air quality. “The western portions of the United States do deal with this more frequently, but for us, it’s a pretty rare phenomenon.”

Sooty smoke from the wildfires reached as far south as Virginia, prompting state and local agencies to issue alerts and caution residents to reduce time outdoors. According to a new IQAir report released Tuesday, the annual concentrat­ion of small particulat­e matter in Chicago last year averaged 13 micrograms per cubic meter of air. In the month of June, it averaged 28.4 micrograms per cubic meter.

This fine particulat­e matter, or PM2.5, is smaller than or equal to 2.5 micrometer­s, about 30 times smaller than the width of a strand of human hair. The World Health Organizati­on advises countries to stay below an annual average of 5 micrograms of PM2.5 per cubic meter of air. On the national level, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency recently lowered annual air quality standards from 12 micrograms to 9 micrograms per cubic meter of air.

For IQAir’s 2023 World Air Quality Report, scientists studied informatio­n from over 30,000 air quality monitoring stations and more than 7,800 locations in 134 countries and territorie­s across the globe. More than 17,000 hours of data from each station was grouped by cities and weighted by population.

Because of time difference­s and depending on the number of monitors in a city, an average worldwide index might not paint a complete picture, according to experts such as Trent Ford, the Illinois State climatolog­ist.

“But in general, to see cities like Chicago — which don’t, citywide, have this kind of perennial problem with air quality — at the top of that list, just gives you an idea of how unusual the

conditions are,” Ford previously told the Tribune.

In Chicago and the Midwest

IQAir found the most polluted city, not based on size, in the United States in 2023 was Beloit, Wisconsin, which borders Illinois. Columbus, Ohio, was ranked as the most polluted major U.S. city, ahead of Chicago and Indianapol­is was third. PM2.5 levels at the 10 most polluted major U.S. cities all exceeded WHO guidelines.

With eastern parts of Canada experienci­ng more wildfires than usual, the Midwest was enveloped in thick smoke as a weather system moving counterclo­ckwise pushed air from Quebec and Ontario toward the Great Lakes.

“It was just smoke plume after smoke plume,” Thomason said.

Produced by vehicle exhaust, industry emissions and forest fires, PM2.5 can harm human health and sometimes be deadly. Initially, this particulat­e matter may cause a burning sensation in the eyes and nose. But because of its small size, it can settle deep in the lungs and cross into the bloodstrea­m.

“It is the most harmful and common air pollutant and causes the most pollution-related deaths. PM2.5 penetrates every cell of our bodies, from the cells in our skin to cells deep in our lungs, and even in our brain,”

Hammes said. “With an estimated 7 million premature deaths worldwide every year, air pollution is the greatest environmen­tal threat to human health.”

Concerns about wildfire smoke can compound Chicago’s existing problems with pollution, especially in neighborho­ods and parts of the city historical­ly affected by heavy industry.

Olga Bautista, executive director of the Southeast Environmen­tal Task Force, who also participat­ed in the Midwest panel, said harmful air quality events disproport­ionately affect communitie­s that have long struggled with air pollution.

“Southeast Side of Chicago residents are experienci­ng higher incidences of (chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease), higher incidences of heart disease,” Bautista said. “And then, we’re also a community that is medically underserve­d. So you have a lot of sick people and not a lot of places to get help.”

One of her relatives often takes days off work to stay with her son, who has missed 50 to 60 school days every academic year because of concerns about pollutants in the air; sometimes this includes emergency room visits, she said.

“But it’s not just (her),” Bautista said. “A lot of families talk about how they’re being impacted.”

Health issues and wage losses are often connected as people skip work or quit their jobs to care for themselves or their loved ones.

 ?? PEREZ/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE ANTONIO ?? Chicago skyline and power lines along Halsted Street near Chicago Ave., during the second straight day of hazy and poor air quality conditions in Chicago on June 28, 2023.
PEREZ/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE ANTONIO Chicago skyline and power lines along Halsted Street near Chicago Ave., during the second straight day of hazy and poor air quality conditions in Chicago on June 28, 2023.

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