http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A34566-2002Sep3.html
(washingtonpost.com)
EPA Links Lung Cancer, Diesel Exhaust
Study Says Long-Term Exposure Also Can Cause Respiratory Illnesses


By Eric Pianin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, September 4, 2002; Page A02

The Environmental Protection Agency concluded yesterday that 
long-term exposure to exhaust from diesel engines likely causes lung 
cancer in humans and triggers a variety of other lung and respiratory 
illnesses.

The study, the culmination of decades of research, highlights the 
health problems posed by the complex mix of gases and fine particles 
emitted by heavy-duty diesel engines operating on the nation's 
highways, farms and construction sites.

"Overall, the evidence for a potential cancer hazard to humans 
resulting from chronic inhalation exposure to [diesel emissions] is 
persuasive," the report states.

The study, involving tests on occupational exposure and on animals, 
focused on diesel engines manufactured before the mid-1990s, when the 
government began pressing for tougher emission standards. With new 
engine and fuel technology expected to produce significantly cleaner 
engine exhaust by 2007, experts project a 90 percent reduction, from 
today's levels, in health-threatening exhaust particles from on-road 
vehicles.

"The agency expects significant environmental and public health 
benefits as the environmental performance of diesel engines and 
diesel fuels improves," said Paul Gilman of EPA's Office of Research 
and Development.

Although the EPA's final assessment echoes preliminary agency 
findings and other documents from various world health organizations 
and studies in California, it provides added urgency to efforts by 
the EPA and others to tighten diesel emission standards under the 
Clean Air Act.

A federal appeals court in May unanimously upheld a Clinton 
administration regulation requiring a speedy and dramatic reduction 
in pollution from large trucks and buses. That rule -- strongly 
contested by truck manufacturers and diesel fuel refiners because of 
the associated costs -- would cut emissions of particulate matter by 
90 percent and nitrogen oxides by 95 percent, beginning in 2007.

The Bush administration has largely taken a strong stand in support 
of the tougher emissions standards. Last month, the White House and 
EPA rejected a plea from House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) and 
other lawmakers to postpone the new anti-pollution standards for 
long-haul diesel trucks. The standards will provide stiff penalties 
for engine manufacturers that don't meet an October deadline for 
compliance under a consent decree.

The administration has also announced it will increase efforts to 
regulate emissions from off-road diesel-driven machinery and 
equipment, such as farm equipment and earth movers. A study by state 
air pollution control officials found that more than 8,500 premature 
deaths are caused annually by extraordinarily high levels of air 
pollution from such machinery.

Some environmental groups have voiced concern that EPA and White 
House officials might attempt to dilute the effectiveness of the 
Clinton rules governing on-road diesel trucks and buses. That's 
because administration officials have said they would consider 
incentives to encourage engine makers and refineries to change engine 
designs and switch to low-sulfur diesel fuel for off-road vehicles by 
2006, in return for a reduction in the emission standards for trucks 
and buses.

One approach under consideration is to set an emissions cap for 
on-road and off-road vehicles and machinery, and then create a 
market-based system to allow companies to buy and trade credits for 
off-road and on-road emissions.

"Children riding buses back to school today need stronger protections 
against the health impacts of diesel exhaust, but the Bush 
administration is considering rolling back clean air standards for 
diesel buses and trucks," said Emily Figdor, clean air advocate for 
the U.S. Public Interest Research Group. "Until recently, the Bush 
administration appeared committed to ushering in the next generation 
of diesel vehicles."

EPA spokesman Joe Martyak disputed assertions that the administration 
was backing away from its commitment to reducing health-threatening 
diesel emissions.

"We're already sensitive to the importance of this issue, which is 
why we are moving along on the diesel issue, on-road and off-road, 
with an aggressive schedule," he said. "We've been well aware of the 
health implications and impact of [diesel engine particulate matter] 
and this report affirms some of those concerns."

The EPA's 651-page diesel health assessment report cited occupational 
health studies and tests on animals showing diesel emissions to be a 
carcinogen, or cancer-causing substance. While there remain 
uncertainties, the report said, "it is reasonable to presume that the 
hazard extends to environmental exposure levels" as well.

"The overall evidence for potential human health effects of diesel 
exhausts is persuasive," the report added.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company


http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/17613/story.htm

Diesel fuel exhaust likely to cause cancer - US EPA

USA: September 5, 2002

WASHINGTON - U.S. environmental regulators in a new report this week 
formally classified for the first time diesel exhaust from trucks and 
buses as likely to cause cancer in humans.

Green groups are seizing on the new report from the Environmental 
Protection Agency as proof the Bush administration needs to crack 
down on polluting diesel fuel emissions.

"This will underscore that diesel exhaust is a health hazard and 
should be controlled," said Frank O'Donnell at the Clean Air Trust, 
who called the report "the most in-depth health assessment to date" 
on diesel fumes.

Environmental groups are worried the Bush administration will roll 
back clean air regulations for diesel fuel.

The EPA in early 2001 issued standards to reduce diesel emissions 
from trucks and buses by more than 90 percent.

The administration said it backed those rules, but later said it 
might permit diesel engine makers to trade emission-reduction credits 
instead of producing cleaner trucks and buses.

The EPA is considering similar clean diesel standards for 
construction and farm equipment.

In addition to concluding that diesel fumes likely cause lung cancer, 
the EPA found diesel exhaust triggers asthma and other respiratory 
problems.

The agency said its report is based on exposure from diesel engines 
built prior to the mid 1990s. As new diesel engines with cleaner 
exhaust emissions replace existing engines, the report's conclusions 
will have to updated, it said.

REUTERS NEWS SERVICE




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