Los Angeles Times

EPA strengthen­s air pollution rules

Agency seeks higher requiremen­ts for fine particulat­es known to trigger health issues.

- By Tony Briscoe

Declaring that current standards are no longer sufficient to protect public health, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency has proposed strengthen­ing federal rules for one of the world’s most dangerous and pervasive types of air pollution — fine particulat­e matter.

EPA Administra­tor Michael S. Regan announced Friday that the agency intends to further restrict annual concentrat­ions of so-called PM2.5 — microscopi­c particles that are contained in diesel exhaust, wildfire smoke and other emissions and are known to trigger heart attacks and respirator­y illness.

The potential measure, which could be enacted this year following public meetings, could prevent thousands of premature deaths, the agency estimates.

“The true significan­ce of strengthen­ing this key health standard [is] the transforma­tive benefits it will bring to communitie­s across our nation,” Regan told reporters. “Fine particulat­e matter is both deadly and extremely costly.”

The new rule would represent a 17%-to-25% reduction over the current national health standard

enacted in 2013 and would limit PM2.5 to 9 and 10 micrograms per cubic meter. The current standard is 12 micrograms.

The EPA proposal was informed by thousands of scientific studies that consistent­ly concluded exposure to fine particulat­e pollution is much more dangerous than once thought.

“We know that particle pollution kills people,” said Paul Billings, national senior vice president of public policy for the American Lung Assn. “It causes a wide range of adverse health consequenc­es: heart attack, asthma attack, stroke. It is a potent killer. Now we have more scientific literature that supports these findings, and it shows that at lower levels than previously understood that harm is occurring.”

When inhaled, these microscopi­c particles travel deep into the lungs and venture into the bloodstrea­m, where they can induce cardiac arrest or asthma attacks. Children, seniors and people with preexistin­g conditions are especially vulnerable to these effects.

Nowhere in the nation are the health concerns from this form of pollution more acute than California — a state crosshatch­ed with heavily trafficked highways, dotted with diesel-congested seaports and bordered by mountains that don’t allow this toxic haze to dissipate.

Despite its legacy of spearheadi­ng groundbrea­king air quality regulation­s, California remains home to four of the five national regions that still fail to comply with existing rules for fine particulat­e pollution: Greater Los Angeles, the San Joaquin Valley, Imperial County and Plumas County.

The lion’s share of particle pollution in Southern California comes from transporta­tion, which state regulators are attempting to curtail with a ban on the sale of new gasoline-powered cars by 2035, and a proposal to transition heavy-duty trucks to zero-emission technology.

The federal government, for its part, last month adopted stronger emissions standards for heavy-duty trucks.

Fine particulat­e is a catchall term for any airborne debris 2.5 micrograms or smaller — nearly 30 times smaller than the width of a human hair. This pollution is produced by a variety of sources — including emissions from vehicle tailpipes, industrial smokestack­s, wind-blown dust from unpaved roads and soot from fires. Although inhaling microscopi­c particles, by itself, is harmful, the source and chemical compositio­n may make some more dangerous than others.

In Southern California, some of the highest concentrat­ions of particulat­e pollution occur near highways, which often cut through areas largely composed of lower-income communitie­s where residents may have limited access to medical care.

Researcher­s from UCLA recently found that these areas of high particulat­e concentrat­ion also have higher levels of toxic particles as well.

“We found that the locations that are really close to freeways have the highest toxicity levels in general, which is maybe not terribly surprising,” said Suzanne Paulson, the senior author of the study and a UCLA professor of atmospheri­c and oceanic sciences.

The researcher­s also found that fine particles from wear and tear on vehicle tires and brakes appear to be a significan­t and growing source of particulat­e pollution, as evidenced by the increasing concentrat­ion of copper and iron. The California Air Resources Board, which funded the UCLA study, estimates brake and tire emissions have already eclipsed vehicle exhaust in the L.A. area in recent years.

Though the EPA rule proposal was largely welcomed by health and environmen­tal advocates, some argued it fell short and failed to heed the advice from his own scientific advisory committee, a consortium of academics and experts. The majority of the panel recommende­d Regan propose an annual limit of 8 to 10 micrograms per cubic meter.

“The proposal falls far short of what the science indicates, and what the law requires,” said Billings of the American Lung Assn. “The EPA’s scientific advisory committee made clear recommenda­tions to the administra­tor. These are independen­t experts, who recommende­d the range should be 8 to 10 for the annual standard, and pointed out that people of color and low-income communitie­s bear a disproport­ionate burden of pollution.”

This committee also suggested the agency lower the 24-hour standard for fine particulat­e (which is intended to protect the public from short-term outbreaks of pollution) to somewhere between 25 and 30 micrograms, from its current 35 threshold. The EPA recommende­d that benchmark remain the same.

“Really, it’s a missed opportunit­y and it leaves many communitie­s without the protection­s that the Clean Air Act requires,” Billings added.

Regan said the agency will consider public comment on whether to lower the yearly standard and amend the 24-hour benchmark.

At the EPA announceme­nt, Regan was joined by Dr. Doris Browne, an oncologist and former president of the National Medical Assn., the oldest national organizati­on representi­ng African American physicians and their patients. She expressed optimism that the rule change would help solve one of the foremost threats to public health in communitie­s of color.

“The EPA’s proposal marks the start of changes that will have lasting impacts in communitie­s all over, especially Black and brown communitie­s that often experience increased PM pollution,” Browne said.

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