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October 3, 2012
Dear Sustainability Watch Reader,  

I am pleased to provide you with your weekly Sustainability Watch newsletter. This week's topic is "Air Pollution Control."
Air Pollution Control Regulations
 
In August 2012, the US Court of Appeals struck down the EPA'sross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR) in a 2 to 1 ruling, stating that the EPA "overstepped" its legal authority and issued standards that were too strict. The Court sided with power companies and mining groups who initially challenged the measure. According to Circuit Judge Brett Kavanaugh, the Court's job is to "independently ensure that the EPA stays within the boundaries Congress has set." 

The court's ruling "significantly imperils long overdue clean air safeguards for millions of Americans" according to the general counsel of the Environmental Defense Fund, who will be seeking corrective action to this ruling. The ruling may only be a short reprieve for coal-dependent facilities and power companies that would have been unable to pay the added financial costs the CSAPR carried.  
 
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Executive Summary

 

The term "air pollution" refers to harmful particles, liquids or gases in the atmosphere. Although such substances can occur naturally through events like fires and volcanic eruptions, most air pollution is caused by human activity. Sources of pollution are often classified as stationary (e.g., factories, furnaces) or mobile (e.g., vehicles, ships, aircraft, motorized devices). The burning of wood, coal, and other fossil fuels is the single greatest contributor to air pollution, although many aspects of industry, agriculture, waste management and everyday living add to the problem.

 

Air pollution can be either localized or global, depending on the type of pollution and prevailing wind currents. Some types of pollution exist in the troposphere (the layer closest to earth) and mainly affect the region where the pollution first occurred. However, local particulate matter and gases are also capable of traveling thousands of miles within the troposphere. Some of the air pollution on North America's west coast has been traced to China, proving that harmful material can travel all the way across the Pacific Ocean. Greenhouse gas pollution is truly a global problem; regardless of where the GHG pollution originates, it has the same effect on the overall atmosphere.

 

Air pollution is also usually described as either an indoor or an outdoor problem, although outdoor air pollution can certainly enter buildings and become an indoor air problem. In general, outdoor pollution is caused by industrial and vehicular emissions, while indoor pollution is caused by office equipment, office furnishings, and inadequate ventilation. Poor outdoor air quality can lead to or exacerbate asthma and other respiratory illnesses, while poor indoor air quality can lead to similar symptoms as well as a host of other problems, including Sick Building Syndrome (SBS) and Building Related Illnesses (BRI).

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