News for Release: Thursday,
Sept. 21, 2006
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
EPA Strengthens U.S. Air Quality Standards
Contact: Jennifer Wood, (202) 564-4355 / wood.jennifer@epa.gov
John Millett, (202) 564-4355 / millett.john@epa.gov
(Washington, D.C. - Sept. 21, 2006) Today the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency announced the strongest national air quality standards in the country's
history. These National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) address fine and
coarse particle pollution, also known as particulate matter (PM).
"Regardless of the rhetoric, facts are facts – today EPA is delivering the most
health protective national air standards in U.S. history to all 300-million
Americans," said EPA Administrator Stephen L. Johnson. "As a 26-year EPA
scientist, I have spent my career working to hand down a cleaner, healthier
environment – and these stronger air quality standards do just that."
PM is a complex mixture of extremely small particles and liquid droplets in the
air (i.e. dust, soot and particles too small to see). The standards address two
categories of particle pollution: fine particles and inhalable coarse particles.
Fine particles are 2.5 micrometers in diameter and smaller; inhalable coarse
particles have diameters between 2.5 and 10 micrometers. Exposure to particle
pollution is linked to a variety of significant health problems ranging from
aggravated asthma to premature death in people with heart and lung disease.
The final action significantly strengthens EPA's previous daily fine particle
standard – by nearly 50 percent – from 65 micrograms of particles per cubic
meter to 35 micrograms of particles per cubic meter of air. This standard
increases protection of the public from short-term exposure to fine particles.
By revising the daily fine particle standard, it will yield additional estimated
health benefits valued at between $9 billion to $75 billion a year. These
standards will reduce premature deaths, heart attacks and hospital admissions
for people with heart and lung disease. EPA is also retaining the current annual
standard for long-term exposure to fine particles at 15 micrograms per cubic
meter. Based on recently updated benefits estimates, meeting this standard will
result in benefits ranging from $20 billion to $160 billion a year.
EPA is protecting all Americans from effects of short-term exposure to inhalable
coarse particles by retaining the existing daily PM10 standard of 150
micrograms per cubic meter. This standard protects against premature deaths and
increased hospital admissions for individuals with heart and lung disease. EPA
is revoking the annual coarse particle standard because the available evidence
does not suggest an association between long-term exposure to coarse particles
at current ambient levels and health effects.
These standards will require significant reductions in air pollution. The
comprehensive clean air strategy established by the Bush Administration gives
states the tools needed to meet – and achieve reductions beyond – the national
clean air standards. Two of the five rules with the largest projected health
benefits in EPA's history have been adopted under the Bush Administration –
Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) and Clean Air Nonroad Diesel Rule. CAIR
requires the power sector to reduce fine particle-forming sulfur dioxide
emissions in the eastern U.S. by more than 70 percent and nitrogen oxides
emissions by more than 60 percent. These reductions will help a number of areas
meet the particle pollution standards, and CAIR will prevent an estimated 17,000
premature deaths annually. The Clean Air Nonroad Diesel Rule will require
significant reductions of direct emissions of fine particles and emissions that
contribute to particle pollution formation nationwide.
EPA selected the levels for the final NAAQS after reviewing thousands of
peer-reviewed scientific studies about the effects of particle pollution on
public health and welfare. The agency's science and policy review documents were
examined by external scientific advisors and the public. The agency also
carefully considered public comments on the proposed standards. EPA held three
public hearings and received more than 120,000 written comments.
States must meet the revised standards by 2015, with a possible extension to
2020, depending on local conditions and the availability of controls. Later this
month, EPA will issue guidance on monitoring fine and coarse particle pollution.
For more information about the final standards announced today:
http://epa.gov/pm/naaqsrev2006.html
For general information about particulate matter:
http://epa.gov/pm/
R252