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Dirty Air, Dirty Power - Mortality and Health Damage Due to Air Pollution from Power Plants
6/9/2004
Dirty_Air.pdf
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Executive Summary
As the new home of Florida PIRG's environmental work,
Environment Florida can be contacted with any questions regarding this news release. Asthma attacks, respiratory
disease, heart attacks, and premature deaths—all of these are among the serious
public health problems caused by air pollution from the electric power sector.
In 2000, the Clean Air Task Force, on behalf of the Clear the Air cam-paign,
commissioned Abt Associates to quantify the health impacts of fine particle
air pollution from power plants. This study found that tens of thousands of
people die pre-maturely every year and hundreds of thousands more suffer asthma
attacks as a result of power plant pollution alone.
With new research linking
lung cancer deaths and heart attacks to power plant pollution, Clear the Air
commissioned Abt Associates to update its 2000 study to reflect this new science
and examine different policies being debated at the federal level to clean up
power plants. This report summarizes the findings of the Abt Associates study,
reviews the contribution of power plants to particle pollution, and compares
the relative benefits of the chief policy proposals to reduce power plant fine
particle pollution. Key findings include:
• Fine particle pollution
from U.S. power plants cuts short the lives of nearly 24,000 people each year,
including 2800 from lung cancer.
• The average number
of life-years lost by individuals dying prematurely from exposure to particulate
matter is 14 years.
• Hundreds of thousands
of Americans suffer each year from asthma attacks, cardiac problems, and respiratory
problems associated with fine particles from power plants. These illnesses result
in tens of thousands of emergency room visits, hospital-izations, and lost work
days each year.
• Power plant pollution
is responsible for 38,200 non-fatal heart attacks per year.
• The elderly, children,
and those with respi-ratory disease are most severely affected by fine particle
pollution from power plants.
• People who live in
metropolitan areas near coal-fired plants feel their impacts most acutely –
their attributable death rates are much higher than areas with few or no coal-fired
plants.
The vast majority (at least
90 percent or 22,000) of the deaths due to fine particle pollution could be
avoided by capping power plant sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide pollution at
levels consistent with the installa-tion of today’s best available emissions
controls. Compared with the requirements of current law, the Bush Administration’s
so-called “Clear Skies” proposal would result in 4,000 additional preventable
premature deaths each year while repealing the very safe-guards that could save
those additional lives.
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