What's New List Serve Post Display

What's New List Serve Post Display

Below is the List Serve Post you selected to display.
newsrel -- Study links California regulations, dramatic declines in cancer risk from exposure to air toxics

Posted: 21 Sep 2015 16:33:09
Please consider the following news release from the California
Air Resources Board: http://bit.ly/1KIiQ7a
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

September 21, 2015

NEWS RELEASE 15-55

CONTACT:

Melanie Turner
(916) 322-2990
melanie.turner@arb.ca.gov


Study links California regulations, dramatic declines in cancer
risk from exposure to air toxics 

Particle pollution from diesel-fueled engines, responsible for
most airborne cancer risk in California, declined nearly 70%

SACRAMENTO - An Air Resources Board study, published today in the
prestigious scientific journal “Environmental Science &
Technology,” shows that the cancer risk from exposure to the
state’s most significant air toxics declined 76 percent over a
23-year period in California, a direct result of regulations
targeting unhealthful emissions from these air pollutants. 

The study quantifies emission trends for the period from 1990
through 2012 for seven toxic air contaminants (TACs) that are
responsible for most of the known cancer risk associated with
airborne exposure in California. 

“These impressive reductions in California’s most hazardous toxic
contaminants in our air took place against a backdrop of more
than two decades of steady growth in California, with a growing
population, and increasing numbers of cars and trucks that used
ever larger quantities of gas and diesel,” Air Resources Board
Chair Mary D. Nichols said. “There is no way these improvements
in public health would have occurred without a strong, well
designed program to reduce public exposure to toxic air
pollution.”

Significant findings of the study, “Ambient and Emission Trends
of Toxic Air Contaminants in California,” include:
•	Thanks to state regulations, emissions from perchloroethylene
from dry cleaners and hexavalent chromium from chrome plating,
each dropped by more than 90 percent, and regulations already in
place are expected to eliminate the remaining emissions of
perchloroethylene and greatly reduce hexavalent chromium. 
•	Diesel particulate matter, which is emitted mainly from trucks
and buses and is responsible for most of the airborne cancer risk
in California, declined 68 percent, as a result of the State’s
regulatory efforts to clean up diesel exhaust. This reduction
took place even while the state’s population increased 31
percent, diesel vehicle-miles-traveled increased 81 percent and
the gross state product increased 74 percent. The implementation
of ARB’s recent diesel engine retrofit and replacement
requirements has accelerated fleet turnover to cleaner trucks,
and significant additional reductions are projected statewide. 
•	Two other toxic air contaminants emitted mainly from mobile
sources, benzene and 1,3-butadiene, declined by nearly 90
percent. This was largely the result of California gasoline
reformulation in 1996.
•	The aggregated collective cancer risk from exposure to these
seven air toxics declined 76 percent over the 23-year period.

The paper makes clear that further significant reduction in
cancer risk to California residents is expected to continue as a
result of continued implementation of air toxic controls. Such
controls are part of broader statewide transportation
initiatives, including the Truck and Bus Rule and more than a
dozen rules focused on diesel equipment serving ports and
railyards. Neighborhoods in freight corridors, including those
near ports, will especially benefit.

The nearly 70 percent drop in harmful diesel particle pollution
coincided with actions taken over the years, beginning in the
1990s, to reduce diesel emissions.  In the 1990s, California
adopted a reformulated diesel fuel program, started a heavy-duty
diesel truck roadside inspection program, implemented particle
pollution standards for urban transit buses and established
standards for off-road diesel engines. In 2006, California began
requiring ultra-low-sulfur diesel fuel. And following the
establishment of California’s statewide Truck and Bus Rule in
2008, California began requiring diesel particulate filters on
trucks, dramatically reducing diesel particulate matter, or soot,
from the exhaust gas of diesel engines. 

ARB regulations have reduced air toxics emissions from vehicles
and their fuels, from stationary sources and from consumer
products since the mid-1980s. In response to public concern, the
California Legislature passed the Toxic Air Contaminant
Identification and Control Act in 1984. Since then, ARB has
implemented regulations to limit TAC emissions. In 1987, the
California Legislature passed the Air Toxics “Hot Spots”
Information and Assessment Act, which requires businesses to
reduce risks from exposure to emitted TACs.

To access the publication, visit:
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.est.5b02766

Link to the full article may not be available until Friday.
Interested reporters are invited to contact Melanie Turner at the
phone number provided.




California is in a drought emergency.
Visit www.SaveOurH2O.org for water conservation tips.

ARB What's New

preload