Air pollution threatens our health

Nearly half of all Americans live in places with unsafe levels of air pollution, which causes heart attacks, asthma attacks, emergency room visits, hospital admissions and even death.

On days with high levels of smog pollution, even healthy adults who try to exercise outdoors can experience a reduction in lung function of between 15 and 20 percent. And deaths from cardiovascular and respiratory causes increase on days when air pollution is at its worst.

Studies also show that one in ten women of childbearing age has enough mercury in her bloodstream to put her child at risk of health effects should she become pregnant. The consequences are serious: Children who are exposed to even low-dosage levels of mercury in the womb can have impaired brain functions, including verbal, attention, motor control, and language deficits, and lower IQs.

We need to clean up the largest polluters

The largest sources of these dangerous pollutants are well-known, and include power plants, industrial facilities, and cars and trucks. In fact, burning fossil fuels to power our transportation sector, generate electricity and power other industry produces roughly 90 percent of all U.S. emissions of nitrogen oxides—a key ingredient in smog pollution.

Coal-fired power plants alone spew tens of thousands of pounds of toxic mercury into our air every year, which falls to earth in the form of rain and contaminates rivers, lakes and streams. And it doesn’t take much mercury to have a big impact on our health. Scientists found that a single gram of mercury can contaminate an entire 20-acre lake.

With your help, we can save lives

Recently, the EPA moved ahead with efforts to significantly reduce soot and mercury pollution, and they’ll soon start developing critical standards for smog pollution. Combined, these standards will save tens of thousands of lives every year. Unfortunately, polluters and their allies in Congress have launched a coordinated attack to block these critical safeguards.

We’re working closely with our allies in the public health community, lobbying key senators, and rallying thousands of activists stand up for public health.

It won’t be easy, but if enough of us speak out, we can drown out the coal industry lobbyists and make sure that the EPA is allowed to do its job and protect public health.

 


Clean Air Updates

News Release | Environment America

Pollution’s Effect on Children’s Health

This morning the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Clean Air and Nuclear Safety and the Subcommittee on Children’s Health and Environmental Responsibility are holding a joint hearing to hear from a panel of experts about air pollution’s effects on the health of America’s children. Today has also been declared an “orange alert” unhealthy air day for ozone pollution – the primary component of smog.

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News Release | Environment America

Exxon Loses Bid to Halt Clean Air Act Suit

A federal court yesterday rejected a motion by ExxonMobil Corporation and two subsidiaries to dismiss a lawsuit filed against them by Sierra Club and Environment Texas. The lawsuit alleges thousands of violations of the Clean Air Act at the nation’s largest oil refinery and chemical plant complex, located in Baytown, Texas. According to the groups, millions of pounds of pollutants have been released in these violations.

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News Release | Environment America

New Report: Smog-Forming Pollution a Major Threat to Americans’ Health, Environment

Power Plants across the United States emit nearly 2 million tons of smog-forming pollution every year, with power plants in the top 11 most polluting states, including Texas, Pennsylvania, Indiana and Ohio, responsible for 50 percent of the total emissions of the pollutant, according to a new Environment America report, Dirty Energy’s Assault on Our Health: Ozone Pollution. 

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Report | Environment America

Dirty Energy's Assault on our Health: Ozone

Fine particle pollution from U.S. power plants cuts short the lives of nearly 24,000 people each year and causes hundreds of thousands of asthma attacks, cardiac episodes, and respiratory problems.

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News Release | Environment America

Petition Defending the Clean Air Act Signed by Hundreds of Thousands of Americans Delivered Electronically to the White House

265,914 Americans concerned about the public health impacts of the assaults on the Clean Air Act in Congress have signed a petition to President Barack Obama thanking him for his continued public statements opposing anti-environmental provisions and asking him to continue to stand up to the big polluters and special interests and veto any legislation that includes riders or other language that would roll back clean air protections.

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