U.S. EPA tightens soot standards for first time in decade
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[January 07, 2023]
By Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will
tighten national air quality standards for fine particle pollution
emitted from vehicles and industrial sources for the first time since
2012, the agency said on Friday.
Fine particulate matter, or soot, comes from sources ranging from power
plants to cars and trucks and refineries. It causes lung and heart
damage and has been found to disproportionately affect low-income
communities, according to the EPA.
"Fine particulate matter is both deadly and extremely costly," EPA
Administrator Michael Regan told reporters, adding the decision was
based on science and a rigorous evaluation of available data.
The proposal would lower the allowable concentration of particulate
matter smaller than 2.5 microns, or PM 2.5, to a range of 9 to 10
micrograms per cubic meter (µg/m3) on average per year, from the current
12 µg/m3 in place since 2012. The EPA said it would also take public
comment on revising the level to as low as 8 µg/m3, and as high as 11
µg/m3.
Public health and environmental groups on Friday welcomed the decision
but criticized the agency for not going further.
Most members of the EPA's Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC)
had recommended that the annual average start in a range as low as 8-10
µg/m3 and the primary 24-hour PM 2.5 standard be lowered to 25 µg/m3.
EPA left the 24-hour standard intact at 35 µg/m3.
A study that the Environmental Defense Fund commissioned found that an
annual standard of 8 µg/m3 prevents more than four times as many
premature deaths as a standard of 10 µg/m3.
"The science is clear that we need standards at the most protective ends
of the ranges that EPA's own scientific advisors recommended," said
National Assistant Vice President at the American Lung Association Laura
Kate Bender, who said dozens of groups will press for tighter standards
during the 60-day public comment period.
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The Rocky Mountains are pictured as a
layer of air pollution hangs over Denver, Colorado, U.S. January 21,
2020. Picture taken January 21, 2020. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart/File
Photo
The EPA evaluates the PM2.5 standard every five years and tends to
tighten the level after review. It will finalize the rule later this
year after it reviews public comments.
Former President Donald Trump's administration had kept the 2012
standard despite mounting research that those levels threaten public
health.
The EPA estimates that an annual PM2.5 standard of 9 µg/m3 would
prevent up to 4,200 premature deaths per year and yield $43 billion
in net health benefits in 2032.
Groups representing the cement, manufacturing and oil industries
criticized the rule for adding regulatory burdens and said some
companies may not be able to comply.
"The proposed tightening of PM NAAQS will likely result in PM
emissions standards being technically and economically infeasible
for the industry to meet," said Mike Ireland, president of the
Portland Cement Association.
Meanwhile, Earthjustice, which had sued the EPA to update the PM2.5
standard left by the Trump administration, said Friday's proposal
was a "missed opportunity" to address daily spikes in soot pollution
that affect some 63 million people in the United States.
"EPA is not living up to the ambitions of this administration to
follow the science, protect public health, and advance environmental
justice,” said Seth Johnson, Earthjustice attorney.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; Editing by David Gregorio, Diane
Craft and Josie Kao)
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