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July 12, 2001

Diesel Cancer Risk Dwarfs All Other Air Toxics Combined

New EPA Data Reveal Much Higher Than Expected Risk Levels, Place By Place   Nationwide, exhaust from diesel engines accounts for 78% of the total added   cancer risk in outdoor air from all hazardous air pollutants combined, based   on U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) data, according to a new   analysis on Environmental Defense's www.scorecard.org   website .

The analysis is based on a massive EPA study, which provides detailed   estimates of the levels of 41 top hazardous air pollutants in every community   in the U.S. EPA's previous version did not include information on diesel   particulate emissions.

"The dominance of diesel in the unhealthiness of our air is a revelation,"  said David Roe, Environmental Defense senior attorney. "It couldn't be seen  before, only because studies weren't trying to look for it." Scorecard.org is  able to translate quantities of hazardous air pollutants into cancer risks,  both nationally and at the local level. For any locality, see:  www.scorecard.org/env-releases/hap/community.tcl.  

"The bad news is that cancer risks from air toxics are much higher than the   public has been told before. The good news is that a great deal of the air   toxics problem can by addressed by focusing on just this one pollutant.   Cutting diesel exhaust has to be priority number one for everyone concerned   about the health of our air."

Diesel's predominance leads to surprising results. For example, supposedly   clean San Francisco shows a risk level of 2,600 additional cancer cases per   million, with 90% of the risk coming from diesel emissions. The goal set in   the Clean Air Act for air toxics is a maximum of one additional case per   million.

The air pollution comes both from diesel vehicles on the roads, like trucks   and buses, and from offroad equipment like bulldozers and heavy construction   machinery. "Offroad diesel equipment is a big part of the problem that most   people don't realize, and that is long overdue for emission controls," Roe   said.

 

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