Do they cause more problems than they are worth?
RICHARD HEINBERG for
Common
Dreams
Every Thursday our next-door neighbor hires a worker to use a leaf blower. This infernal machine drives me nuts.
Rather than letting a
pet peeve render me literally insane, I’ve decided to explore
the leaf blower’s deeper significance. A psychologist might call this writing
therapy. Maybe the result can also provide a little relief for you, the reader,
if you share my irritation.
The most obvious critique of the leaf blower is that it’s an obnoxious, destructive piece of machinery. As everyone within earshot of one knows, gasoline-powered leaf blowers are noisy. Deafening, in fact. The device blasts 95 to 115 decibels of sound at its operator.
According to the website Dangerous Decibels, this is roughly equivalent to a chainsaw or a passenger jet taking off, and it can cause permanent hearing loss. Further, research into the specific characteristics of sound from gas-powered leaf blowers, published in the Journal of Environmental and Toxicological Studies, showed that, unlike most other loud machines, leaf blowers produce low-frequency noise that travels long distances and penetrates building walls. That’s why a single leaf blower can annoy an entire neighborhood.
Leaf blowers contribute significantly to worsening noise pollution in
cities. Wildlife experience chronic stress as
a result, with birds having to sing louder to find mates or define breeding
territory. Everyone—human or non-human—feels on edge when that ugly noise
starts up.
At the same time, leaf blowers emit toxic pollution. The blower’s two-stroke engine drinks a combustible mix of oil and gas, but a typical leaf blower burns just two-thirds of its fuel, spewing the rest into the air.
That’s why two-stroke gas engines have been phased out in nearly all
applications—except landscape maintenance. The noxious stew of gases released
by leaf blowers—including cancer-causing benzene, volatile organic compounds,
ozone, and nitrogen oxides—is a health hazard for workers and bystanders alike.
Regarding nitrogen oxide, the California Air Resources Board figures that using a gas-powered leaf blower for an hour emits as much as driving a Toyota Camry from Los Angeles to Denver.
Of course, gas-powered leaf blowers
also spew climate-wrecking CO2, but their nitrogen oxide emissions have an
outsized climate impact: The EPA estimates that
one pound of nitrous oxide has almost 300 times as much global warming effect
as a pound of carbon dioxide.
All of these drawbacks have led over 100 cities and towns
across the country to ban or restrict
the use of gas-powered leaf blowers. California is phasing out gas-powered
leaf blowers, but doing so will take many years. My neighbor obviously hasn’t
gotten the memo, nor have millions like him.
It Goes Deeper
People use leaf blowers, blasting air at up to 280 miles an hour, to remove tree leaves, with the ultimate goal of keeping their lawns looking neat. But leaf litter is habitat for worms and insect larvae. Leaf blowers are just one reason the total biomass of insects on the planet is declining by about 2% per year.
Leaf
litter also protects and builds topsoil, of which we’re losing tens of billions of tons per year globally.
So, we’re using noisy, polluting machines to do things that, in many cases, we
really shouldn’t be doing in the first place.
The leaf blower replaces muscle-powered work, thereby increasing what economists call labor productivity. In this respect it’s just like a wide range of other industrial machines.
From the powered loom, which
displaced workers in early industrial Britain, to artificial intelligence (AI),
which now threatens the livelihoods of millions of information workers
worldwide, new machines disrupt economic routines. They make life easier in
certain respects, but in doing so they impose environmental and social costs
that often eventually overshadow the immediate benefits.
Physical work can be hazardous, particularly if it involves powered machinery or chemicals. But it provides needed exercise, along with the psychological benefit of seeing a process through from start to finish. Do we really want a future in which all we do is push buttons and stare at screens (the button-pushing eventually to be replaced with a brain-computer interface)?
Techno-optimists may say that, with ever more machines in our lives, we will be freed to get our exercise by doing yoga or playing pickleball rather than from back-breaking toil. But survival that’s no longer tied to physical effort can leave us feeling unmotivated and useless.
Perhaps our rush
to increase labor productivity by replacing muscle power with machine power has
passed the point of diminishing returns.
Then there’s the problem of economic inequality. Who actually uses leaf-blowers? In most cases, it’s low-income landscape workers, who are exposed to the air pollution and noise from leaf blowers at close range over sustained periods of time.
Gas-powered lawn care has been linked to
debilitating health issues like cancer, asthma, heart disease, and hearing
loss; so, unsurprisingly, it’s the less-well-off who face the brunt of those
health insults.
Stepping back, we see this general pattern reflected in
the rest of industrial society: Just as leaf-blower noise and air pollution
gets shunted mostly toward low-paid landscape workers, resource extraction and
polluting industries tend to be located near marginalized communities,
nationally and globally. Therefore, the leaf blower just binds us more strongly
to already unfair and dangerous social trends.
Finally, this technology’s reliance on gasoline and oil ties it to a historical development that I’ve come to think of as history’s greatest catastrophe disguised as humanity’s biggest triumph—the fossil-fueled Industrial Revolution.
Depleting and climate-changing coal, oil, and natural gas have brought about dramatic human population growth, along with immense profits and unprecedented wealth (for the few). But all of these presumed and probably transitory benefits have been based on depleting natural resources, and on processes that are perilously changing the climate and degrading ecosystems across the planet.
Every time we pick up a gasoline-powered machine
we are viscerally linked to that chain of ersatz benefits and spiraling
impacts.
What’s the Solution?
For years, my wife Janet and I just used an ordinary garden rake when we needed to move leaves around. But we live on a quarter-acre lot, with a garden and orchard that require constant upkeep. And we’re getting older.
Last year we bought an electric leaf blower, mostly just to remove leaves from the rain gutters on our house—which it does very effectively. It’s much quieter than our neighbor’s gasoline-powered leaf demon (According to the American Green Zone Alliance, the average electric blower produces 65 decibels of noise at the point of use).
It doesn’t emit health-harming or climate-changing gases
(again, at the point of use). And we have solar panels on our roof to charge
the battery that powers it. So: problem solved?
Well, not so fast. Manufacturing the machine, and particularly the battery, required minerals that had to be mined, transported, and processed; along with energy—most of which probably came from coal, since the device was made in China.
The resource extraction, energy production, and
manufacturing that brought us our electric leaf blower entailed pollution,
which probably ended up impacting relatively poor communities. And if everyone
used electric leaf blowers, we’d be causing more soil loss and insect habitat
destruction.
In some ways, the gasoline-versus-electric leaf blower choice mirrors the conundrums and trade-offs of our larger societal energy transition from fossil fuels to solar and wind power. Climate change and fossil fuel depletion require humanity at large to shift away from its current dependence on coal, oil, and natural gas.
But replacing our currently vast fossil fuel energy usage with equivalent amounts of energy from renewable sources will require building enormous numbers of solar panels, wind turbines, batteries, and power lines, along with a bewildering array of machines and manufacturing facilities that use electricity rather than fossil fuels.
Producing all this new infrastructure will take oodles of minerals and metals, contributing to resource depletion. The manufacturing processes will generate pollution.
Factories will likely be
located in relatively poor communities. And new solar farms and transmission
lines will entail more land use, and therefore more disruption of ecological
cycles.
The only way to avoid those ill effects would be simply
to use less energy—which means doing less with machines, and more with human
hands and feet. This is why electric cars are not as much of a solution to
climate change as the simple overall reduction of powered transport.
If we started down that path, beneficial results would
ripple throughout society; however, during the transition, the medicine
of degrowth would
have side effects, not all of which might be desirable to everybody.
Eventually, corporations, megacities, and economic growth would be replaced by
cooperative communities working within local environmental limits. We could
preserve scientific knowledge, which might gradually come to resemble
traditional wisdom.
But, back to the leaf blower. Why make such a big deal
over so small a problem? Compared to the existential predicaments we humans
face (including climate change, hyper-partisan politics fueled by spiraling
economic inequality and social media algorithms, nuclear weapons, and “forever chemicals” disrupting
human and animal reproduction), the gasoline-powered leaf blower is
just an annoyance. Why not just use the electric blower and leave it at that?
After all, it’s better than the gas version.
Sorry, I can’t stop there. Call it the curse of knowing too much. Yes, Janet and I will keep using our electric blower where raking is impractical. But every time I pick up the machine, I’m reminded that our society’s overall socioeconomic model is unsustainable and anti-life.
We need
far, far more than a green energy retrofit. We need an entirely different way
of existing on this unique, imperiled planet—a way that many Indigenous people are still familiar with.
Buying an electric leaf blower was an interesting
experiment that we may not repeat. I’m glad we kept our rake. It gets a lot
more use.
RICHARD HEINBERG
is a senior fellow at the Post Carbon Institute and the author of fourteen
books, including his most recent: "Power: Limits and Prospects for Human
Survival" (2021). Previous books include: "Our Renewable Future:
Laying the Path for One Hundred Percent Clean Energy" (2016),
"Afterburn: Society Beyond Fossil Fuels" (2015), and "Peak
Everything: Waking Up to the Century of Declines" (2010).