Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Fires emit more air toxins than industry: study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Dec, 2020 07:03 PM
  • Fires emit more air toxins than industry: study

Wildfires have taken over from industry as a major source of a group of cancer-causing chemical toxins in the air, Environment Canada says.

The first national assessment of polycyclic aromatic compounds in more than 25 years has found that air has improved around aluminum and steel plants. But wildfires and vehicles have stepped in to keep average concentrations at about the same level that they were in the 1990s, says federal researcher Elisabeth Galarneau.

"Those big industrial point sources have been reduced to a very small fraction of the total," she says. "The largest (remaining) source by far is the natural emissions from forest fires."

The levels are still high enough in many places across the country to exceed health guidelines, the assessment found.

Polycyclic aromatic compounds are created during burning of everything from oil to wood to cigarettes. Many are carcinogenic and are considered priority pollutants by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

No federal guidelines for the chemicals exist. Alberta, Quebec and Ontario have set recommended levels, but Galarneau said only Ontario's are based on the effects on human health.

"(Ontario's) guideline is exceeded almost everywhere we looked in Canada," Galarneau said. "The exceedances in some areas are well over an order of magnitude."

The increasing size and severity of wildfires is a big reason why the levels haven't changed despite improved industrial emissions, she said.

"We would normally have called those natural, but now forest fires are seen to be increasing in frequency and severity because of climate change. There's now a (human-caused) component."

Research has found that climate change contributes to bigger, hotter fires by drying out forests and extending the fire season.

Other increased sources of the chemicals are increased vehicle emissions as well as residential wood-burning. The contributions of those sources vary widely from place to place.

Vehicles account for less than 10 per cent of emissions nationally, but in Toronto they can reach 50 per cent or even higher.

Galarneau warned that her research isn't the whole picture. Her team looked at only 16 different compounds, a list that dates back to the 1970s. Analytical chemistry has come a long way since then. Scientists are becoming increasingly concerned about other similar chemicals that aren't on the list, she said.

"Everywhere you look, it seems people are coming to the same conclusion. There are other compounds beyond those 16 that make toxicity, and our measurements and models should probably expand to incorporate those."

The paper points out that concentrations of toxins in the air increase by factors of 1.4 to 6.2 when the number of compounds tested for is expanded.

The 16 compounds in this study became priorities because of their association with cancer. Galarneau said cancer isn't the only health danger from the chemicals on the expanded list. They are thought to have effects on the lung and liver as well.

"We know less than we do for the 16, but there's a body of evidence that is growing and identifying toxic effects associated with them," she said. "Some of these other (chemicals) are also implicated in non-cancer health outcomes."

The study is the fourth in a series of recent research publications on Canada's air quality. Two more are due and a final summary report is to be released in the coming months.

MORE National ARTICLES

Hearing for man accused of threatening PM put off

Hearing for man accused of threatening PM put off
Corey Hurren is accused of ramming his truck through a gate at the Governor General's official residence on July 2.

Hearing for man accused of threatening PM put off

Singh blasts Trudeau, O'Toole as business allies

Singh blasts Trudeau, O'Toole as business allies
The Liberals need the support of one party to carry on, and the fourth-place NDP have enough seats to make that happen.

Singh blasts Trudeau, O'Toole as business allies

U.S. border closure extended to Oct. 21

U.S. border closure extended to Oct. 21
Crossings of the border have been largely restricted to trade goods, essential workers and citizens returning home since March, in an attempt to limit the spread of COVID-19.

U.S. border closure extended to Oct. 21

BQ's Blanchet tests positive for COVID-19

BQ's Blanchet tests positive for COVID-19
Quebec's public health rules say a person who tests positive but doesn't have serious symptoms must stay isolated for 10 days.

BQ's Blanchet tests positive for COVID-19

Post-CERB benefits may yet change: Qualtrough

Post-CERB benefits may yet change: Qualtrough
To get the help after the fact, workers would have to show they could not work at least 60 per cent of their usual hours, or about three days out of a five-day workweek.

Post-CERB benefits may yet change: Qualtrough

Man injured in targeted shooting in Surrey, B.C.

Man injured in targeted shooting in Surrey, B.C.
A man was found suffering from gunshot wounds and remains in hospital. It's the third targeted attack this week in Metro Vancouver.

Man injured in targeted shooting in Surrey, B.C.