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Chapter 15: Air Pollution. By Megan Daly, Jordan Finci, and Collin Brady. Case Study. Case Study : When Is a Lichen Like a Canary?. 19 th century coal miners- used Canaries in coal mines to listen to their singing.
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Chapter 15: Air Pollution By Megan Daly, Jordan Finci, and Collin Brady
Case Study: When Is a Lichen Like a Canary? • 19th century coal miners- used Canaries in coal mines to listen to their singing. • Singing- warning signal. When stopped, air contained methane which could ignite and explode. • Today- use sophisticated equipment, but living things can also warn us of bad air. • Lichens- consist of fungus and an alga living together in mutualistic partnership. Widespread and long lived. • Biological indicators of air pollution- continually absorb air as source of nourishment • Help track pollution to source: • highly polluted=no lichen/gray-green crusty lichen • Moderate air pollution=orange crusty lichens • Clean air- leafy lichens • Examples • Chernobyl- People eat reindeer, determine which of remaining reindeer to move by analyzing lichens to pinpoint contaminated areas.
15.1 The Structure of Science and the Atmosphere
The Troposphere • This is the atmosphere’s innermost layer • Made up of nitrogen, oxygen and small amounts of water vapor and carbon dioxide • 75-80% of air mass is found in troposphere • The troposphere also plays a key role in weather and climate
The Stratosphere • The second layer of the atmosphere (17-48km above surface) • The ozone here filters out most of sun’s UV radiation (prevents 95% of UV rays from reaching earth’s surface) • Almost twice the size of the troposphere, but contains less matter • Similar composition except stratosphere contains 1/1,000 concentration of water vapor and significantly more ozone
15-2 Outdoor Air Pollution • Air Pollution- presence of chemicals in the atmosphere in concentrations high enough to harm organisms and materials and to alter climate. • Effects- range from annoying to lethal • Air pollutants- Natural + Human sources • Natural- dust blowing off the earth’s surface, forest fires, volcanic eruptions, volatile organic chemicals released by some plants, the decay of plants, and sea spray • Spread out, rarely reach harmful levels (exceptions: volcanic eruptions and some forest fires) • Human- since discovery of fire, inputs increased when when we began extracting and burning coal. • Today, most outdoor pollutants from humans come from urban areas and the burning of fossil fuels in power plants and factories and motor vehicles. • Can reach harmful levels in troposphere, especially urban areas
Outdoor Air Pollution Continued… • Primary pollutants- emitted directly into the troposphere in a potentially harmful form. (Examples: soot, carbon monoxide) • Secondary pollutants- primary pollutants reacting with one another or basic components of air to form new pollutants • According to the World Health Organization (WHO), 1/6 people on earth (1.1+ billion), lives in an urban area where outdoor air is unhealthy to breathe • Most areas- air pollution control laws poorly enforced or don’t exist
Outdoor Air Pollution Continued… • US and other developed countries- government-mandated standards set maximum allowable atmospheric concentrations for six conventional air pollutants commonly found in outdoor air. • 6 pollutants: carbon monoxide (CO), nitrogen dioxide(NO2), sulfur dioxide(SO2), suspended particulate matter(SPM), ozone(O3), and lead • Most scientists add two other chemicals • volatile organic compounds (VOCs, mostly hydrocarbon, photochemical smog in cities), and carbon dioxide (CO2, increase troposphere temperature and change climate) • Many oil and coal companies against adding these- would have to spend more money controlling emissions. • 12 US stats sued EPA for failure to regulate CO2 emissions. Some states passing own laws to regulate it.
Photochemical Smog • Mix of air pollutants formed by reaction of nitrogen oxides and hydrocarbons under influence of sunlight • VOCs + NO2 + heat + sunlight=ground level ozone, oxidants, other pollutants • Formed in car engines, coal power plants • Has to exposed to UV radiation in order for the photochemical smog
Photochemical Smog • Increase in temperature can lead to higher levels of ozone and the components of smog • All modern cities suffer, but more common in areas with sunny, dry climates and a lot of cars • (1999 study) if 400 million people in China drive gas powered cars in 2050, the resulting photochemical smog produced could cover entire western Pacific and extend to US
Industrial Smog • Mix of sulfur dioxide, sulfuric acid, solid particles emitted by burning coal and oil • Caused by burning of coal and oil • Has grey color from suspended solid particles
Industrial Smog • Today, rarely a problem in developed countries • Coal/oil now burned in large boilers with pollution control or with smoke stacks that transfer pollutants • In developing countries, lots of pollution • Lots of coal burned without pollution control
Asian Brown Cloud • Industrial smog across India, Bangladesh, and China • Caused by emission of ash, smoke, and dust
Natural Factors that Reduce Air Pollution • Rain and snow cleanse air • Why cities with dry climate more prone to photochem smog than cities with wet climates • Sea spray from oceans can wash out particulates • Wind can blow pollutants away • Dilute them by mixing with clean air
Factors that INCREASE air pollution: • Urban buildings can slow wind speed/reduce removal of pollutants • Hills/mountains can reduce flow of air • Leads to build up of pollutants • High temperatures promote chem reactions leading to photochemical smog formation
Grasshopper Effect • Atmospheric distillation that transfers pollutants to poles • when compounds that help dilute pollutants evaporate from ground areas and deposited into other places • Deposited in oceans, carried to higher latitudes, near poles • By atmospheric currents and oceanic currents
Temperature Inversion • Usually: air near surface warm, rises to mix with cooler air above it • Disperses pollutants • Sometimes: warm air can lie above cool air, creating temperature inversion • Air does not mix, so pollutants concentrate • Some areas more prone to temp. inversions, like LA basin • sunny climate, mountains and ocean, city with millions of people
Acid Deposition • Sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, particulates react to produce acidic chemicals • Coal burning power plants use tall smokestacks • Reduce local pollution, but increase regional • Form acidic substances that remain in atmosphere • Acidic particles descend to earth through wet or dry deposition • Wet: acid rain, snow, fog • Dry: particles
Harmful Effects of Acid Deposition • Contributes to human respitory diseases (like asthma) • Can leach toxic metals into drinking water • Damage statues, buildings, monuments • Decreases atmospheric visibility • Can kill fish • Harm forests/crops
Ways to Reduce Acid Deposition • Best solutions preventative • Reduce: air pollution, coal use • Increase: usage of natural gas, renewable energy resources • Burn low sulfur coal • Remove certain chemicals from smokestacks/car exhaust
Section 5 Indoor Air Pollution
Indoor Air pollution • Often poses much greater threat to human population than outdoor air pollution • Levels of 11 common pollutants are generally two to five times higher indoors than outdoors, sometimes up to 100 times higher • Air pollution in cars is very high, especially in traffic jammed urban areas • Most people in developed countries spend 70-98% of their time indoors (includes vehicles)
Exposure to Radon Gas • Radon-222 is a radioactive gas found in soil and rocks • It has been known to seep into houses and increase the risk of lung cancer • Common in underground deposits of uranium, phosphate, granite, and shale • Radon-222 is harmless when exposed outdoors, bud is extremely harmful when released indoors
15-6 Harmful Effects of Air Pollution • Respiratory system- number of mechanisms to protect from air pollution. • Hair in nose larger particles, sticky mucus lining in upper respiratory tract for small particles • Sneezing and coughing expel contaminated air and mucus • Cilia- hundreds of thousands of tiny mucus-coated hair like structures in upper respiratory tract • Prolonged or acute exposure to air pollutants- overload or break down defenses (Ex: smoking) • Lead to diseases such as asthma. 17+ million Americans have asthma, 5 million younger than age 5 • Lung cancer and chronic bronchitis over time can form from persistent inflammation and damage • Symptoms- mucus build up, painful coughing, shortness of breath. Deeper damage to lungs- emphysema, irreversible damage to air sacs • People with respiratory diseases especially vulnerable
Harmful Heath Effects of Pollutants • Air pollutants damage materials and human lungs and worldwide prematurely kill at least 3 million people each year • 8,200 deaths per day. 2.8 million (93%) result from indoor air pollution. • In US, EPA estimates annual deaths from indoor and outdoor air pollution range from 150,000-300,000 people • Equal to two fully loaded 400-passenger jumbo jets crashing each day with no survivors. • Most deaths come from inhalation of fine and ultrafine particles from coal-burning power plants, mostly in eastern half of US • EPA recent studies estimate 125,000 Americans get cancer from breathing soot-laden diesel fumes from buses and trucks. • 1 year, a large diesel powered bulldozer can produce as much air pollution as 26 cars.
Section 7 Preventing and Reducing Air Pollution
Air Pollution Laws in the U.S. • The Clean Air Acts in the United States have greatly reduced outdoor air pollution from six major pollutants • Laws were passed in 1970, 1977, and 1990 • Regulated by the EPA • Unfortunately smog levels didn’t drop from 1993-2002 and EPS estimates that airborne fine particles cause over 15,000 premature deaths per year in U.S., and 95,000 cases of bronchitis
U.S. Air Pollution Laws • Environmental scientists applaud the success of U.S. air pollution laws but have suggested several ways to make them more effective • Rely on prevention rather than cleanup • Increases fuel efficiency in cars and other vehicles • Reduce emission from two-cycle gasoline engines • More seriously deal with the problem of indoor air pollution • Better enforcement of the Clean Air Acts
Using Marketplace to Reduce Air Pollution • Allowing producers of air pollutants to buy and sell government air pollution allotments in the marketplace can help reduce emissions • Clean Air Act limits the amount of SO₂ that each coal burning power plant can emit each year • Cap and Trade Program
Reducing Outdoor Air Pollution • There are a number of ways to prevent and control air pollution from coal-burning facilities and motor vehicles • Burn low-sulfur coal or just remove sulfur from coal • Convert coal to a liquid or gaseous fuel • Shift to less polluting fuels • Tax each unit of pollution produced • Remove pollutants after combustion
Reducing Indoor Air Pollution • Little Effort has been devoted to reducing indoor air pollution even though it poses a much greater threat to human health • Limit smoking to well ventilated areas • Prevent radon infiltration • Place office machines in well ventilated areas • Increase intake of outside air • Change air more frequently • Circulate building’s air through rooftop greenhouses • Adjustable fresh air vents for work spaces
What is the Next Step? • We need to focus on preventing air pollution, with emphasis on sharply reducing indoor air pollution in developing countries • Improve energy efficiency to reduce fossil fuel use • Rely more on renewable energy • Reduce or ban indoor smoking • Develop simple and cheap tests for indoor pollutants such as particulates, radon, and formaldehyde