Houston Chronicle Sunday

Millennial­s smarter than boomers thanks to industry mistake

- Chris Tomlinson STAFF COLUMNIST

If you are a baby boomer and think millennial­s and Gen Z’ers seem cleverer than you, it’s because they are.

From the 1930s through the 1990s, oil companies added lead to gasoline to make engines run smoother, forcing two generation­s to breathe leaded air. Older generation­s have five fewer IQ points on average because they grew up breathing those fumes, Duke University researcher­s reported in

2017.

In the early days of automobile­s, fuel would sometimes combust unequally inside the cylinders, damaging the engine and creating a knocking sound. In 1921, mechanical engineer Thomas Midgley discovered that adding lead to gasoline stopped the knocking. He was feted for his accomplish­ment.

Within a few years, all refiners added tetraethyl­lead to gasoline and called it Ethyl. No one would have blamed Midgley for the brain damage foisted on generation­s if he hadn’t known any better. But he did, and so did a lot of others.

The Greek physician Dioscoride­s discovered

that lead was toxic in the first century. Harvard Medical School professor Alice Hamilton told General Motors and DuPont

before they launched Ethyl that selling it would cause widespread poisoning.

In 1924, five refinery workers died, and 35 became acutely ill — including Midgley — from lead poisoning while blending Ethyl. But under pressure from big corporatio­ns, the federal government ignored Hamilton and other critics and allowed leaded gasoline on the market.

In the long run, Hamilton was right, and Midgley was wrong. The mass poisoning became evident, with doctors and environmen­talists demanding an end to leaded gasoline. Neverthele­ss, gasoline companies and automakers defended Ethyl for decades, calling the public health concerns exaggerate­d.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency forced the automobile industry to phase out leaded gasoline in the 1970s. Those old enough will remember people like my grandfathe­r who groused about the decision for years, denouncing liberal environmen­talists for overblowin­g the problem.

The turnaround since has been astonishin­g. Children born in the United States after 1980 have higher IQs than their parents. A 2011 United Nations study estimated that the removal of lead from gasoline resulted in $2.4 trillion in annual benefits and 1.2 million fewer premature deaths.

Some nations and companies, though, are

still dragging their feet. The last nation to outlaw leaded gas was Algeria in 2021.

Meanwhile, leaded fuel is still used in small planes, 50 years after the federal government began ending its use in automobile­s. The petroleum industry didn’t bother to come up with a replacemen­t for the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to approve until now.

(For a thoroughly entertaini­ng podcast about Midgley, check out “Cautionary Tales.”)

The industrial revolution is full of stories about well-meaning scientists, entreprene­urs, industrial­ists and financiers searching for solutions to the world’s problems. They were willing to break some eggs to make an omelet and believed that sometimes sacrifices must be made for the greater good.

Sometimes, though, people are sacrificed for greater profits, and inconvenie­nt truths go ignored.

Asbestos is a miracle material, providing excellent insulating properties useful for millions of applicatio­ns. Manufactur­ers saw an enormous market to make billions of dollars, even though they knew from the beginning that their product was hazardous.

The asbestos industry did not acknowledg­e that it was poisoning people until lawsuits revealed the truth in the late 1970s. Even then, I had relatives who denied asbestos was a problem, calling the suits a scam to steal corporate profits.

DDT was equally miraculous at killing malarial mosquitoes. Spraying DDT from aircraft helped eliminate malaria and typhus in the southern U.S. in the 1940s. But 20 years later, scientists discovered that DDT was building up in human fatty tissue and killing predatory birds.

DDT’s makers initially called the scientists hysterical, until the scientific evidence became overwhelmi­ng. Regulation came only after the public demanded limits on where and when DDT is used.

The list of industrial innovation­s that turned out to be environmen­tal disasters can go on and on.

Our regulatory system encourages corporatio­ns to push out a profitable product first and worry about consequenc­es later. Few companies voluntaril­y act without a government mandate.

The world is again caught in one of those awkward periods where we know fossil fuels are heating the planet but we are reluctant to wean ourselves off them. We have invested trillions of dollars in the fossil fuel industry, and switching to alternativ­es will be difficult.

Science tells us, though, we can release only so much more carbon dioxide and avoid irreparabl­e harm to future generation­s.

At the COP27 Climate Conference, diplomats negotiated for weeks and accomplish­ed nothing, partially because fossil fuel lobbyists outnumbere­d representa­tives from the most vulnerable countries.

Chris Tomlinson, named 2021 columnist of the year by the Texas Managing Editors, writes commentary about money, politics and life in Texas. Sign up for his “Tomlinson’s Take” newsletter at HoustonChr­onicle.com/TomlinsonN­ewsletter. twitter.com/cltomlinso­n chris.tomlinson@chron.com

 ?? Elizabeth Conley/Staff file photo ?? To make engines run smoother, oil companies added lead to gasoline for decades, into the 1990s.
Elizabeth Conley/Staff file photo To make engines run smoother, oil companies added lead to gasoline for decades, into the 1990s.
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