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SAN FRANCISCO --
It may be
small consolation to
Americans that can't breathe
freely, but it seems that American smokestacks aren't entirely to blame for the
chemical smog that hangs over cities along the U.S. West Coast. A
new study indicates that about 10 percent of the ozone and other
pollutants are arriving from the industrialized nations of East
Asia.
"Although Los Angeles can't blame the bulk of its air problems on Asia, there is definitely some contribution," says Dan Jaffe, associate professor of science, technology and the environment at the University of Washington, Bothell. "Our results show that Asian pollution is affecting much of the U.S.West Coast, with Washington and Oregon affected slightly more because of wind patterns."
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Asian pollutants
can reach as far as Hawaii, Jaffe had proved in earlier studies of wind-borne contamination. His first data from a West Coast site,
acquired last May, measured atmospheric levels of pollutants such
as nitrogen oxide, carbon monoxide, ozone and hydrocarbons. His
collaborator, Terje Berntsen of the University of Oslo, Norway,
used these data in a computer model that employs meteorological
observations to predict and calculate where and how pollutants
move through the atmosphere on any particular day. By combining
industry's known emissions of pollutants with such factors as wind
speeds and direction, the computer program indicated that 10
percent of the ozone and carbon monoxide detected at Cheeka Peak
had blown across the Pacific Ocean from Asia.
Ozone, which can damage the human respiratory system and destroy vegetation, is the product of nitrogen oxides released from the burning of fossil fuels, and has a long atmospheric life. Carbon monoxide is released directly into the atmosphere from the combustion of fossil fuels. Both, says Jaffe, are atmospheric pollutants that probably would have been considerably lower in Asia just 30 years ago. All the data analyzed in the computer model, he says, indicates an increasing flow of pollutants from industrialized Asia. "Despite the recent economic problems, Asia is booming, and the spread of its pollutants is rapidly increasing," he says. Jaffe presented his findings at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco on December 10. He is the principal investigator on a three-year project to measure pollutants in the atmosphere from the University of Washington's remote Cheeka Peak research station on the Olympic Peninsula. This is Jaffe's fourth project investigating the transportation of pollutants through the atmosphere. He has also made measurements on Oki Island off the Coast of Japan and on Shemya at the tip of the Aleutian Islands chain. |
Albion Monitor December 15, 1997 (http://www.monitor.net/monitor)
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