Hope this doesn't happen here this summer.  Anyone know anything about
this?
Mike  
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Summer heat will cause deadly ozone

Robin McKie, science editor
Sunday May 9, 2004

The Observer

Thousands of Britons may be forced to wear charcoal masks and stay 
indoors this summer to avoid deadly fogs of ozone that will pollute 
the country during heatwaves, scientists have warned.
They have discovered that last August's heatwave caused plants and 
trees to release waves of a chemical called isoprene, which 
contributes to the production of ozone in the air. Scientists now 
believe ozone killed up to 600 people last summer. 

'Temperatures topped 100F (37.7C) last summer for the first time 
since UK records began, and similarly intense heatwaves will become 
increasingly frequent as global warming intensifies. Current 
projections suggest they could happen ten times more often,' said 
Professor Alan Thorpe, of the Centres of Atmospheric Science. 'Among 
all our other problems, we are going to deal with severe ozone 
pollution.' 

Ozone, which is particularly dangerous for children, old people and 
asthmatics, is produced when strong sunlight breaks up the nitrogen 
oxides released by car exhausts. In recent years Britain has made 
major improvements in reducing these oxide levels in the air, and 
hopes rose that the problem was under control. 

But the latest ozone study, carried out by a team led by Alastair 
Lewis, of York University and funded by the Natural Environment 
Research Council, has discovered that a dangerous new factor arises 
when temperatures soar into the high 30s. 

'We went to Chelmsford to study ozone and isoprene levels last year,' 
said Lewis. 'By chance, we picked the two weeks of the heatwave. What 
we discovered was startling. When the temperature reached the high 
90s and topped 100, plants and trees ... start to produce greatly 
increased amounts.' 

It is thought that isoprene acts as a kind of heat-shock molecule, 
protecting leaves from damage when temperatures rise above 35C. When 
plants are short of water, they produce even more. 

However, in the atmosphere isoprene acts as a catalyst driving the 
rate at which sunlight breaks down nitrogen oxide and turns it into 
ozone. The more isoprene there is, the more ozone is generated, 
effectively wiping out the moderate success the government has had in 
reducing levels. 

Britain's new midsummer heatwaves are therefore likely to have severe 
consequences. European law states that governments must inform the 
public when hourly concentrations of ozone rise above 180 
microgrammes per cubic metre. On 6 August last year, ozone levels 
over London peaked at 300 microgrammes. Other high spots were found 
in East Anglia and the Midlands. 

The impact on the public was dramatic. One study by the Office of 
National Statistics indicated that 2,000 more people died in August 
2003 compared with the same month in previous years. But calculations 
by John Stedman, at the National Environmental Technology Centre, 
indicate that these deaths were not all caused by heat stress and 
deyhdration, as was initially supposed. 

Between 225 and 593 were caused by ozone, Stedman estimated. Many 
thousands of others suffered extreme distress, such as museum clerk 
Alison Bottomley, of Nottingham, who suffers from asthma. 'I had to 
stay indoors last summer to get away from the ozone. It was awful. I 
could hardly breathe. I tried a charcoal mask but it restricted my 
breathing. I had to lie or sit down till the heatwave went away.' 

While most advice for dealing with the heat involves staying in the 
shade and drinking plenty of water, the response to pollution by 
ozone, which irritates the lining of the lung, is more draconian. 
Vulnerable individuals are told to avoid major road junctions (where 
car exhaust levels are high), stay indoors and wear masks. 

The team's discovery will intensify calls for Britain to introduce 
even tougher new regulations to reduce emissions of car exhaust 
gases, the basic ingredient that fuels ozone production. 

http://observer.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,4919841-102285,00.html

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