Port area pours out a toxic diesel cocktail
AQMD report measures some of L.A.s sins of emissions,
but doesnt go far enough
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Southern Sierran April 2001 |
By Tom Politeo
A toxic air blanket extends from the San Pedro Channel to downtown Los Angeles
and follows shipping lines all over Southern California. Diesel fumes are responsible
for most of the cancer risk caused by bad air.
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| This AQMD map shows cancer risk from all emission sources, with diesel exhaust responsible for about 70% of the risk. Darker areas correspond to higher risk. The lightest, lowest-risk areas have less than 200 cancer cases per million people, while the black areasincluding the porthave more than 1,200 cases per million risk. |
Wilmington and San Pedro may have the most unhealthy air in the greater Los
Angeles area, according to a government report. By a small margin, Wilmington
edged out other locations in the dubious competition to have the worst air in
L.A. A Southern California Air Quality Management
District report published last year shows a general improvement in air quality
from all toxic pollutants, except one: diesel exhaust. The cancer-causing fumes
follow the ships, trucks and trains of the shipping industry all over the Los
Angeles Basin, with the highest concentrations near shipping centers and along
freeways. The air is worst near the harbor, along the 110 and 710 freeways in
downtown Los Angeles and near the airport.
Southern California residents breathe a cocktail of toxic fumes, including hexavalent
chromium, lead, benzene, perchloroethylene (from dry cleaning), carbon tetrachloride
and numerous other compounds. Clean air regulations have brought the the cancer
risk associated with these compounds (excluding diesel) from about 450 cancer
cases per million people, down to about 150 per million in the past decade.
However, the AQMD study doesnt give any annual figures to compare the
risk from diesel fumes. Because there has been little regulation of diesel emissions
and a significant increase in shipping (trucks, trains and ships), its
likely that the risk associated with diesel use is on the rise.
With plans in the works that will dramatically increase shipping through the
Port of Los Angeles (in San Pedro and Wilmington), it is likely that the risk
associated with diesel exhaust will rise still further unless something is done
to mitigate the pollution.
Diesel fumes are already responsible for almost four times as much cancer risk
as all other chemical compounds combined, though research is still being done
as to exactly how much risk diesel is responsible for.
In the worst case, diesel fumes may be responsible for 25 times the risk from
all other sources. This would raise the risk of getting cancer from about one
person in 750 people to more than one person per every 100. In the best scenario,
diesel fumes may be responsible for twice the cancer risk of all other sources
combined.
The Los Angeles Harbor Department is projecting shipping to increase through
the harbor two to three times over current levels in about the next 10 years.
If there is no improvement in shipping technology, the increased ship, truck
and train traffic will increase diesel pollution and our health risks accordingly.
Fortunately, there are some plans to clean up American-operated diesel trucks.
Though the improvement is welcome, it will kick in too late to help clean up
our air in the short term and it will not reduce cancer risks to acceptable
levels alone, especially with increased shipping.
Further, plans to clean up American trucks will not improve emissions from trucks
that come in to the U.S. from Mexico, and the U.S. may not be able to regulate
those trucks under international trade agreements. Further, the large cargo
vessels that berth in the harbor contribute a substantial percent of our diesel
pollution, and local government may not be able to regulate those either, because
of international trade agreements.
One of the underlying problems with air pollution in the Los Angeles Basin is
that much of it follows socioeconomic lines, with poorer neighborhoods closer
to industrial pollution sources. In San Pedro, for example, neighborhoods closest
to the port have the worst air. Neighborhoods further west and up San Pedro
hill have progressively cleaner air and higher price values.
However, people living in upscale neighborhoods cant necessarily breathe
much easier. Air throughout the L.A. Basin has generally poor quality, and there
are numerous counter examples where higher income neighborhoods have terrible
air. San Pedro itself offers such examples.
As part of its environmental justice initiative, the new AQMD study added three
sites to its list of air monitoring locations: Wilmington, Compton and Huntington
Park. The new study is called MATES-II, or the AQMDs second Multiple Air
Toxics Exposure Study (a follow-up to the 1990 MATES-I). As a result, the new
study monitored 10 total fixed sites.
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The following AQMD web site provides the entire MATES II study to download in a PDF format: http://www.aqmd.gov/matesiidf/matestoc.htm or you can visit the AQMD at http://www.aqmd.gov For information on the health effects of smog |
The MATES-II study consists of two major sections. The first involves monitoring
(or measuring) air quality at each of the 10 sites plus a number of micro-scale
sites. The second involves a three-dimensional computer model of air pollution
in the L.A. Basin.
It is the computer model that shows Wilmington has the highest cancer risk among
the 10 monitoring sites in the basin.
Unfortunately, the AQMD monitored diesel pollution at only eight of the 10 monitoring
sites and Wilmington was not among them. That leaves a potentially confusing
hole in the study.
Further, the study doesnt explain why diesel emissions werent monitored
in Wilmingtonor in Compton, the other site where there was no diesel monitoring.
Though the modeled data corresponds to the measured data fairly well, there
are some differences in ranking as to which site has the most unhealthy air.
Overall, the measured and modeled data are within 20 percent of each other,
which would seem to be a good sign that the model is fairly accurate.
Its fairly surprising that the study didnt monitor diesel emissions
in the harbor area since another map in the study shows that the harbor is the
area that creates the most diesel pollution.
Though the study might suggest that longshore workers may be at particular risk,
it doesnt provide sufficient data to evaluate the depth of that risk.
The study doesnt present enough detail to show whether risks are higher
dockside than inland. Also, though the study shows seasonal variation in riskwith
May being the safest month and November to January being five times more dangerousit
doesnt show how much the risk factor may vary by time of day. Understanding
daily cycles might also be helpful in determining exposure levels for longshore
workers.
Lastly, though the study appears to show that the harbor is the basins
largest source of diesel pollution, and though it provides a detailed breakdown
of pollution by various categories, it doesnt show how much of the regions
diesel pollution is caused by port activity.
For years, the Port of Los Angeles has broken down its EIRs into small projects
and has only listed the component of air pollution generated within the confines
of those projects. This policy has left the public without a clear understanding
of the comprehensive risk created by the port. The MATES-II study is an important
first step in demonstrating that risk.
But the report leaves us just short of seeing such a comprehensive inventory
for the port. Planning for the future of cargo transit in the Los Angeles Basin
requires an understanding of these figures. Just how much diesel exhaust is
released in the port itself by ships, trains, trucks and dockside equipment?
And how much more is released as these vehicles carry cargo in and out of the
harbor?
Reading the report suggests that port-related shipping contributes to an overwhelming
portion of the areas airborne cancer risk. Solid figures would help us
understand the seriousness of the problem and plan for modernizing the shipping
industry to clean up our air.
The figures would also help us seek methods of mitigating the pollution problem
and might suggest that we need to limit port expansion until diesel pollution
solutions are put in place.
Tom Politeo is acting chair of the Sierra Clubs Harbor Vision Task
Force. To reach him, call