For Immediate Release: Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Contact: David Baron, Earthjustice, (202)
667-4500 Ext. 5203, dbaron@earthjustice.org
Paul Cort, Earthjustice, (510) 550-6777,
pcort@earthjustice.org
Mary Havell, American Lung
Association, (202) 715-3459, mary.havell@lung.org
Sharyn Stein, Environmental
Defense Fund, (202) 572-3396, sstein@edf.org
Mark Wenzler, National Parks
Conservation Association, (202) 255-9013, mwenzler@npca.org
Washington, D.C. – A broad coalition of health, conservation,
environmental organizations and state governments is returning to federal court
to compel the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to revise the national
ambient air quality standards for fine particulate matter, more commonly known
as soot.
In today's legal action, the American
Lung Association, Environmental Defense Fund, and National Parks Conservation
Association, represented by the public interest law firm Earthjustice, asked
the District of Columbia Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals to set a deadline
for the EPA to respond to the Court's decision from February 2009, which found
that the standards adopted by the EPA in 2006 failed to protect public health
and welfare.
To date, the EPA has not responded to that ruling by adopting the
required standards. The groups have returned to the same court today, seeking an
order requiring the EPA to adopt the long-overdue air pollution regulations by
no later than September 15, 2012. A group of ten states also filed a companion petition with the
court today.
"It's unfortunate that we need to seek a court order to force the
EPA to strengthen these critical air quality standards," said David Baron,
attorney for Earthjustice. "EPA's delay is inexcusable when people's lives
are at stake."
Airborne particulate matter is comprised of tiny
particles of smoke, soot, metals and other chemical compounds emitted from
sources like power plants, factories, and diesel trucks. Scientific research
shows that these microscopic particles can penetrate deep into lungs, making
them one of the most toxic forms of air pollution. The EPA's own studies show
that each year of delay in limiting particulate matter with tighter national
standards has resulted in thousands of avoidable deaths, along with increased
cases of respiratory and heart diseases.
"Particulate matter can be deadly," said Janice
Nolen, Assistant Vice President of National Policy and Advocacy for the American
Lung Association. "Research tells us that fine particles may be
responsible for tens of thousands of premature deaths nationwide every year.
Particulate matter is also linked to the aggravation of respiratory illnesses,
such as asthma, bronchitis, and chronic obstructive lung disease (COPD), and to
heart disease.
The federal Clean Air Act requires EPA to review
the adequacy of national ambient air quality standards every five years, using
the best health and science data available. In 2006, EPA ignored its independent
science advisors' recommendations for stronger particulate matter protections
and instead left in place the annual standard adopted in 1997. Since then, the
EPA has failed to revisit the air quality standards as required by the 2009
court ruling. Meanwhile, the EPA has also missed another five-year review deadline.
That missed deadline prompted groups in October to send EPA a 60-day notice of intent to sue.
"The EPA must act to protect the public from
this well-documented health hazard," said Peter Zalzal, an attorney with
Environmental Defense Fund. "Strengthening these important air quality
protections will have far-reaching benefits and will help to protect vulnerable
populations, including the young, the elderly, and those already suffering from
respiratory conditions."
"The impact of soot goes well beyond the
crisis in human health," said Mark Wenzler, Director of Clean Air and
Climate Programs for the National Parks Conservation Association. "The
pollution affects our forests, our soil, our water, and the very clarity of the
air around us. The EPA knows of these adverse effects and is required to
mitigate them."
In conjunction with today's legal filings, the
American Lung Association, Earthjustice and the Clean Air Task Force released a
new report titled Sick of Soot: How the EPA Can Save Lives by
Clean Up Fine Particle Air Pollution,
detailing the health damage caused by particulate matter pollution. According
to the study, tighter standards for soot could save more than 35,000 lives every
year.
Link to the Petition for Writ of Mandamus: http://earthjustice.org/documents/legal-document/pdf/pm-naaaqs-mandamus-petition
Link to the "Sick of Soot" report: http://www.earthjustice.org/soot
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