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The good news that went unreported on air quality

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  • The good news that went unreported on air quality

    http://hotair.com/archives/2010/03/1...n-air-quality/

    This looks like great news to me, but I did not see it in any news item when I googled it.
    jim


    The good news that went unreported on air quality

    posted at 3:35 pm on March 15, 2010 by Ed Morrissey

    Last week, the EPA released its annual report on air quality trends … and no one noticed. Why? Unlike most environmental reports, this one didn’t contain dire warnings about the threat of disaster. In fact, as the Institute for Energy Research notes, the EPA discovered that our air has gotten progressively cleaner over the last four decades, and significantly so over the last twenty:
    On Wednesday, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) quietly released their annual report on air quality trends. You would never know it from picking up a newspaper or reading news websites, but the report contains great news. Air quality in the United States has dramatically improved and, according to all indicators, it will continue to improve. …
    EPA reports that air quality has improved for the six main air pollutants:

    Since 1990, nationwide air quality has improved significantly for the six common air pollutants. These six pollutants are ground-level ozone, particle pollution (PM2.5 and PM10), lead, nitrogen dioxide (NO2), carbon monoxide (CO), and sulfur dioxide (SO2). Nationally, air pollution was lower in 2008 than in 1990 for:
    • 8-hour ozone, by 14 percent
    • annual PM2.5 (since 2000), by 19 percent
    • PM10 , by 31 percent
    • Lead, by 78 percent
    • NO2 , by 35 percent
    • 8-hour CO, by 68 percent
    • annual SO2 , by 59 percent …

    This is good news that air quality continues to improve and even more so because the American people do not know it. According to a 2004 poll from the Foundation for Clean Air Progress, only 29 percent of people thought that “America’s air quality is better than . . . it was in 1970.”
    This graphic from the EPA shows the trend since 1970:
    Since 1990:

    A few points to note here. First, I grew up in Southern California, when smog alerts were commonplace and it sometimes got so bad that it hurt to breathe. That would have been at the front end of the 40-year trend graph, and emissions have dropped over 60% during that time. However, a big part of that came over the last 20 years, as the second graph shows. Both graphs show remarkable economic growth unrelated to emissions-restriction efforts and, for that matter, population growth. Most intriguingly, travel has gone up much faster than population growth while emissions declined.
    The carbon emissions data is also instructive. In both graphs, its linkage to population growth is so close that the actual percentage has to be moved off of the right border of the graph. It also parallels energy consumption, which has grown at a slightly lower rate than population, especially over the last couple of years of the report (which may have more to do with the recession). Either way, carbon emissions are not out of control — and attempts to lower them will require an effort much different than the attempt to eliminate pollutant emissions.
    Why hasn’t any news outlet reported these results? Maybe they don’t like good news, especially on the environment.

  • #2
    Re: The good news that went unreported on air quality

    Well, as someone living close to a chemical plant that pumps out enough pollution to be the 12th largest polluter in America, it just does not mean much to me to hear EPA say anything.

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    • #3
      Re: The good news that went unreported on air quality

      silly rabbit, You though environmentalism was about the environment.
      We are all little cockroaches running around guessing when the FED will turn OFF the Lights.

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      • #4
        Re: The good news that went unreported on air quality

        The first thing that jumps out at me is miles traveled:Co2 emissions. Miles traveled are up 163%. And CO2 flat lines, it doesn't jive. So now I wonder where these Co2 samples are taken. There should at least be some correlation. I hold this data suspect and I suspect others do as well.

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        • #5
          Re: The good news that went unreported on air quality

          I don't trust anything from the EPA. They are looking to justify their existence as an agency of govn't.

          Since when has GDP grown since 1990? It's B.S. The GDP has shrunk in real terms, and that would explain why the air is slightly cleaner than in 1990.

          Most of the move toward cleaner air came in the 1960s, not in recent decades. Again, everything from the EPA is suspect.

          And to-day, NASA is presenting more extremophiles, i.e, life found in extreme places on Earth. NASA is looking for funding as well so that it may go on joy-rides to the moon, Europa and on joy-rides to the outer planets.

          The latest NASA extremophiles were a live shrimp and a jellyfish found 600 feet under the Antarctic ice sheet and 12 miles from the sea. Obviously, there must have been an under-ice sheet river draining into the sea, and that river allowed the shrimp and jellyfish to swim under the ice sheet.

          Daaaaaaaaaah! But NASA gets its funding this way.

          And what do we need NASA for? More global-warming models calibrated with faked and fudged data? (Well, we won't get into that now.):rolleyes:
          Last edited by Starving Steve; March 15, 2010, 10:12 PM.

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