Fossil
fuels aren't just warming our climate, they're polluting the air we breathe.
Stuck in standstill traffic in downtown Baltimore, I catch this
message emblazoned across the side of a city bus: “Did you know? This bus
operates in ‘zero emissions’ mode on battery power up to 40 percent of the
time.”
Maybe I should be impressed or encouraged.
Instead, I realize, this bus in front of me is churning out
something I don’t want to breathe at least 60 percent of the time. I’m suddenly
aware that I’m sitting in a sea of exhaust.
I tap the switch to cut off the outdoor air circulation. I look
at the other cars and trucks in the standstill. There’s no visible exhaust, but
I’m not reassured — the most toxic forms of vehicle exhaust are often
invisible.
We’ve made a lot of progress in reducing overall air pollution
in places like Baltimore by raising standards for smokestack emissions and
adopting the vehicle emission limits known as “CAFE” standards.
But it’s not enough.
In 2013, the World Health Organization declared air pollution a
human carcinogen that increases the risk for lung and bladder cancer. And when
a Tufts Medical School team mapped heart attack rates in the Boston suburbs,
they found the highest rates in communities located along the major
transportation arteries.
Vehicle exhaust also contributes to ground-level ozone —
better known as smog — that can blanket entire areas.
This smog contributes to breathing difficulties. When children
play outside on a smoggy summer day, a spike in ground-level ozone can scar
their lungs and mark the beginning of a lifelong struggle with asthma or other
chronic conditions.
So air pollution is implicated in our cancer epidemics, the
prevalence of heart disease, and the persistence of asthma as a serious health
threat.
Burning fossil fuels is the problem.
It’s not only warming our climate, it’s polluting the air we
breathe. We don’t hear enough about the connections between our vehicles, air
pollution, and our health.
A recent MIT study estimated that air pollution kills over 200,000
people annually in the United States. And the largest number is
attributable to emissions from vehicles.
Especially if you live next to highways, ports, or rail lines,
the air you’re breathing is probably dangerous to your health.
Fortunately, we have alternatives to gasoline and diesel fuel.
Electric vehicles — when charged with electricity from renewable sources like
wind and solar — and mass transit can slash your transportation-related carbon
footprint and cut down on particle pollution.
A bus that contributes to air pollution over half of the time
doesn’t impress me. Let’s invest in a future where we can breathe clean air 100
percent of the time.
Rebecca Ruggles is the director of the Maryland Environmental
Health Network (mdehn.org).
Distributed by OtherWords.org.
Distributed by OtherWords.org.