logo

Clean Air News

SearchRSS Feed

For Immediate Release:
2007-09-05
For More Information:
Contact Jennette Gayer
(404) 892-3573

Groups Urge EPA to Strengthen Smog Standards

Atlanta, GA—At a public hearing in Atlanta today, public health advocates called on the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to strengthen its proposed air quality standards for ozone (smog pollution). 

“Ozone can harm even the healthiest lungs,” said Jeanette Gayer, with Environment Georgia.  “EPA needs to significantly strengthen the national air quality standards for ozone so we can all breathe easier.”

Gayer was one of several witnesses who testified at the EPA hearing where public health advocates described the health effects of ozone exposure, particularly on children, and highlighted the scientific consensus on the need to substantially strengthen the health-based air quality standards for ozone.  EPA scheduled additional hearings in Los Angeles and Philadelphia on August 30 and in Chicago and Houston on September 5.

“Ozone is a powerful pollutant that can burn our lungs” said June Deen with the American Lung Association - Southeast Region. “Ozone exposure may lead to shortness of breath, chest pain, wheezing and coughing, increased risk of asthma attacks and even premature death. Children, senior citizens and people with respiratory disease are particularly vulnerable to the health effects of ozone.”

“The more we learn about ozone exposure, the more we understand how dangerous it is,” said Patty Durand, Sierra Club/GA Chapter. “That’s why EPA’s scientific advisors found no scientific justification for retaining the current ozone standard and recommended strengthening it to protect public health.”

Under the Clean Air Act, the EPA must set air quality standards at levels that protect public health, including sensitive populations, with an adequate margin of safety. In 1997, EPA set the national air quality standard for ozone at 0.08 parts per million (ppm) averaged over an eight hour period. In 2006, the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee, which is chartered under the Clean Air Act to advise the EPA administrator on air quality standards, unanimously recommended strengthening the ozone standard to within the range of 0.060 to 0.070 ppm. 

Mothers & Others for Clean Air, the American Lung Association, The Sierra Club, American Thoracic Society, Environment Georgia, Physicians for Social Responsibility and other public health and environmental experts have recommended a standard of 0.060 ppm.

On June 20, however, EPA proposed strengthening the national air quality standard for ozone to within a range of 0.070 to 0.075 ppm, not enough to meet the recommendations deemed necessary to protect public health by the agency’s scientific advisors. 

“While EPA’s proposal is stronger than the current ozone standard, it fails to protect all Americans from the harmful effects of air pollution,” said Ed Arnold of Physicians for Social Responsibility.

“Big oil, electric utilities, and other powerful interests that would be affected by stronger ozone standards are lobbying hard to convince EPA to keep the ozone standards as weak as possible or not change them at all.”

“The science is clear, and the law is clear,” said Rebecca Watts Hull, Mothers & Others for Clean Air program manager at the Georgia Conservancy. “EPA should reject industry pressure to maintain the status quo and instead adopt the most protective ozone standard recommended by its scientific advisors.” 

EPA is accepting public comments on its proposal through October 9 and must issue a final ozone standard by March 2008.