Los Angeles Times

Quantifyin­g VW’s emissions

How much did its diesels spew? In L.A., even a small amount could have an impact.

- By Geoffrey Mohan and Ben Welsh geoffrey.mohan@latimes.com benjamin.welsh@latimes.com

How much extra did the carmaker’s diesels spew? In L.A., even a small amount could have an impact.

Volkswagen has admitted equipping half a million diesel cars in the U.S. with software to cheat on emissions tests — and then, in normal driving, to spew between 10 and 40 times the allowable levels of nitrogen oxides.

But how much pollution have the cars created since 2009, when VW first installed the so-called defeat devices? How much did public health suffer?

Nitrogen oxides are a class of chemicals that contribute to the formation of lung-damaging ozone, which has been linked to respirator­y and cardiovasc­ular ailments and to early deaths.

The added pollution is particular­ly relevant in Los Angeles, where ozone measures exceed federal limits. Many inland communitie­s can experience more than 50 days per year with periods of excessive ozone, according to the South Coast Air Quality Management District.

Quantifyin­g the extra pollution from thousands of VW diesels, over a span of seven model years, is a tricky business. California and federal regulators will use computer models to come up with some estimate on which to base penalties under the Clean Air Act.

That could take weeks, said Stanley Young, spokesman for the California Air Resources Board. “It’s not something we’re going to do on the back of an envelope,” Young said.

Until then, here’s what is known — and not known — about the scandal’s impact on public health.

How much additional nitrogen oxides could have been emitted?

Regulators say the vehicles they tested emitted 10 to 40 times the permissibl­e level of 70 milligrams per mile. With nearly a halfmillio­n cars driving an average of 11,000 miles per year for nearly seven years, that could amount to anywhere from about 14,000 to 59,000 tons of additional nitrogen oxide.

California’s share, based on nearly 67,000 of the diesel cars, would be between 1,900 and 8,100 tons, while the greater Los Angeles area would have been burdened by 750 to 3,000 additional tons over nearly seven years.

These are rough guesses; real pollution levels would be affected by many variables.

Among the issues to be sorted out are the duration and range of emissions, Young said. “There has been a lot of talk that the exceedance­s are 10 to 40 times but there are specific characteri­stics as to when they’re very high and when they’re very low,” Young said. “It’s not like they’re 10 to 40 times all the time.”

At the lower end of that scale — 700 milligrams per mile — the VW diesels spewed seven milligrams above the average in-use rate for the existing U.S. passenger vehicle fleet. That includes scores of makes and models of varying age and maintenanc­e. At the upper end — 2.8 grams per mile — they were about a third as dirty as the average for the current fleet of heavy-duty diesel trucks.

How much ozone was formed?

This will be a multimilli­on-dollar question for Volkswagen. But it may have different answers in different locations.

Ultraviole­t radiation from the sun drives the chemical reactions between nitrogen oxides and other pollutants, producing ozone. Nitrogen oxides emitted in Nebraska on a cloudy winter day wouldn’t form as much ground-level ozone as the same amount from a tailpipe on a sunny summer day in Riverside.

“My gut feeling is, if we’re changing those nitrogen oxide inputs by this slight a degree … you would never notice it in ozone,” said scientist Kent Hoekman, of the Desert Research Institute in Nevada.

Because nitrogen oxides are spewed into California’s air at a rate of about 2,106 tons a day from all sources, “even if it’s exceeding the standard by 40 times, that amounts to about 0.4% increase of this total inventory,” Hoekman said.

But because the Los Angeles basin is so far over its “carrying capacity” for such pollutants, even a small addition matters, said UC Riverside scientist Wayne Miller, a chemical engineer who has researched pollution in the Los Angeles basin for more than three decades.

“It has bothered me that people talk about this as a little bit of a victimless crime. It’s not,” said Joseph Lyou, president of the Coalition for Clean Air and a member of the governing board of the South Coast Air Quality Management District. “Those excess emissions likely led to someone having some sort of adverse health impact.”

Could these emissions have sickened or killed anyone?

Historical­ly, it has been extremely difficult to link illnesses or deaths to pollution sources, not just because the science is complicate­d, but because people move around and are exposed to many other hazards. Epidemiolo­gists, however, use statistica­l “incidence rates” that correlate pollutants with a relative risk of illness or early death, usually to quantify the effects of regulation.

Based on rates used in EPA reports, one to six people could have died earlier than expected in the Los Angeles basin, with estimates varying depending on the model and the possible emission range of Volkswagen or Audi vehicles. The tally ranges from 2 to 16 early deaths in California and 12 to 112 nationwide.

That’s a lot of gray area, experts cautioned.

“In my view, using these risk factors to compute “body counts” is illegitima­te, and comparing these computed body counts with actual deaths, such as from the recent GM ignition switch fatalities, is irresponsi­ble,” Hoekman said.

Lyou agreed that such estimates can’t be used to calculate actual deaths, but he said they can add some context to estimates of the health impact.

Volkswagen has said it has received no confirmed reports of specific health effects linked to nitrogen oxide emissions from the vehicles in question.

“It is important for the public to know that, as the EPA has said, these vehicles do not present a safety hazard and remain safe and legal to drive,” Volkswagen Group of America CEO Michael Horn told a House subcommitt­ee Thursday.

 ?? Julian Stratensch­ulte
European Pressphoto Agency ?? A TECHNICIAN holds a readout device in front of a diesel engine affected by the emissions scandal in Germany. Regulators say the vehicles they tested emitted 10 to 40 times the permissibl­e nitrogen oxide level.
Julian Stratensch­ulte European Pressphoto Agency A TECHNICIAN holds a readout device in front of a diesel engine affected by the emissions scandal in Germany. Regulators say the vehicles they tested emitted 10 to 40 times the permissibl­e nitrogen oxide level.

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