Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Gas-Powered Vehicles Contribute More To City Pollution Than Thought: Research

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Mar, 2020 08:39 PM

    Research suggests cars and other gasoline-powered vehicles are responsible for a share of two highly toxic contaminants in downtown city air that's at least five times larger than previously thought.

     

    Environment Canada scientists used a computer model that allowed them to make much smaller and more local assessments of where chemicals in the atmosphere come from. They looked at polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and benzene — both known carcinogens — in the skies around Toronto.

     

    "We used this model to determine what the contributions are from vehicles," said Elisabeth Galarneau, one of the co-authors of the paper, published in the journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

     

    Few previous studies of those chemicals in urban airsheds exist, she said. Most have focused on smog-causing pollutants such as fine particles or ozone.

     

    What research has been done on PAHs and benzene depends on broad national averages, which have held that most of those substances originate from agricultural burning, wood smoke and industrial sources such as aluminum smelters.

     

    Maybe that's so in the country, Galarneau said. But not in cities.

     

    "When we used this approach, and used it in a city, up to 50 per cent of the PAHs in the air in the (Greater Toronto Area) can be attributed to motor vehicles," she said. "Contributions as high as 90 per cent can be found at other locations."

     

    Previous estimates held that less than 10 per cent of those emissions came from vehicle exhaust.

     

    Galarneau said one reason for the gap is that the new method is much more geographically specific.

     

    "A national average ranking won't necessarily represent every area of the country because communities can be so different from each other."

     

    As well, the computer model takes into account complex reactions and changes that occur to exhaust chemicals once they hit the atmosphere. Previous calculations didn't.

     

    Although study was done in the Toronto area, the findings are likely to be applicable to any large urban area, Galarneau said.

     

    The findings have serious public health implications.

     

    Benzene is classified "very toxic" by the Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety. It's known to cause blood cancer and blood disorders such as anemia and has been associated with other cancers.

     

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says PAHs also cause cancer from both inhalation and skin exposure. They have been shown to harm pregnancy in mice.

     

    Galarneau said both contaminants are routinely higher than recommended levels in the Toronto study area.

     

    "Benzene and PAH concentrations that are observed there are higher than the ambient air quality standards that have been set by the province to protect human health. They are consistently higher."

     

    Galarneau said the findings suggest a move to zero-emission vehicles may have more benefits than helping Canada achieve its greenhouse gas reductions.

     

    "Our research question allows us to look at the kinds of benefits that might be gained by shifting to zero-emissions vehicles or green transportation strategies that encourage walking or cycling — anything that's turning off that exhaust emissions source," she said.

     

    "Our work shows that those strategies, even though they may be aimed at climate change, also have important co-benefits when it comes to toxic air pollutants."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Liberals Poised To Legislate A Ban On Conversion Therapy

    OTTAWA - The Liberal government is poised to introduce a bill that would outlaw therapy intended to alter a person's sexual orientation or gender identity.

    Liberals Poised To Legislate A Ban On Conversion Therapy

    'Wonderful Little Bird': Alberta Man Retrieves His First Plane 48 Years Later

    Growing up on a farm near Cremona, Alta., about 80 kilometres northwest of Calgary, he was obsessed with airplanes as a kid and became a fully licensed pilot by the time he was 17.

    'Wonderful Little Bird': Alberta Man Retrieves His First Plane 48 Years Later

    Burnaby RCMP Warn Of An Increase Of Break-ins At Lower-Level Apartment Units

    The Burnaby RCMP have noticed an increase in residential break and enters occurring in lower-level apartment units.    

    Burnaby RCMP Warn Of An Increase Of Break-ins At Lower-Level Apartment Units

    North American Stock Markets Suffer Meltdown Prompted By Collapsing Oil Price

    North American Stock Markets Suffer Meltdown Prompted By Collapsing Oil Price
    North American stock markets suffered their worst meltdown since the global financial crisis as a collapse in oil prices triggered a plunge in the energy sector and prompted the loonie to take a dive.    

    North American Stock Markets Suffer Meltdown Prompted By Collapsing Oil Price

    Dr. Bonnie Henry, Virus Hunter, Healer, Resolves To 'Break' COVID-19

    At the end of a stark news conference during which Dr. Bonnie Henry wiped tears as she broke the news confirming diagnosis of two cases of COVID-19 transmission at a North Vancouver long-term care home, she worried she was about to frighten her parents.

    Dr. Bonnie Henry, Virus Hunter, Healer, Resolves To 'Break' COVID-19

    Suspect Dies, Three RCMP Officers Hurt, During Weekend Arrest In Whistler, B.C.

    Suspect Dies, Three RCMP Officers Hurt, During Weekend Arrest In Whistler, B.C.
    The office that investigates all cases of police-involved death or serious injury in British Columbia has been notified about a fatality in Whistler.    

    Suspect Dies, Three RCMP Officers Hurt, During Weekend Arrest In Whistler, B.C.