Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumWildfire smoke is eroding decades of air quality improvements, study finds
Last edited Wed Sep 20, 2023, 01:13 PM - Edit history (1)
The onslaught of wildfire smoke amid a warming climate has rolled back years of air quality gains in the U.S.
By Joshua Partlow
Updated September 20, 2023 at 11:32 a.m. EDT | Published September 20, 2023 at 11:00 a.m. EDT
People gather to watch firefighting efforts amid heavy smoke from the Eagle Bluff Fire in Osoyoos, B.C., on July 30. (Jesse Winter/Reuters)
In more than a half century since the Clean Air Act was enacted, there have been dramatic improvements in air quality in the United States, as regulations demanding less-polluting cars and factories helped lift cities from clouds of dirty smog. ... But a big chunk of recent air quality progress has been rolled back for one reason wildfire smoke and its happening far beyond the smoldering forests of Western states.
Over the past two decades, air quality improvements have slowed or reversed in most of the country, eroding about a quarter of the recent gains, according to a new study in the journal Nature. Some states Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, Washington and Wyoming have rolled back 50 percent or more of their progress since 2000. In Oregon and Nevada, wildfire smoke has completely erased their gains.
We had had so much success, and wildfires, just in five to six years, are really unraveling a lot of this progress, said Marshall Burke, the papers lead author and a professor of Earth system science at Stanford University. And thats unfortunate. ... The study builds on previous work by Burke and his colleagues, who had created a detailed map of how much wildfire smoke there has been in the country over the past two decades. That effort relied on melding data from air quality sensors, satellite images of smoke plumes, and computer models that could estimate smoke levels in remote areas without sensors.
The new paper seeks to answer the question: What has all this wildfire smoke done to overall air pollution levels? ... What they found was sobering. ... Data from air quality sensors around the country had been showing steady improvement since 2000 in most states. But around 2016 and earlier in some Western states the trend broke. Since then, air quality progress has significantly slowed in 30 states. In 11 others, it began to reverse.
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By Josh Partlow
Joshua Partlow is a reporter on the The Washington Posts national desk. He has served previously as the bureau chief in Mexico City, Kabul, Rio de Janeiro, and as a correspondent in Baghdad. Twitter https://twitter.com/partlowj
BlueIn_W_Pa
(842 posts)The Clean Air Act forced companies to clean up all their crap that pumped out all sorts of nasty things, particulates, smog, and caused acid rain - all across the country. All human caused and always present. Wildfires are a whole 'other issue and are intermittent and localized.
Martin68
(24,498 posts)improvements." Air quality improvements continue to have a beneficial effect on the air we breathe. While wildfire smoke seriously degrades air quality, it is not permanent, and lasts only as long as the fire burns. Other sources of improvement - controls on industrial emissions and vehicle emissions for example - are still in effect and will continue to have a beneficial effect on air quality. Air quality has returned to norma where we live in Virginia now the the Canadian wildfire smoke is no longer reaching us, as its will elsewhere. The progress is not "unravelling." It is a temporary decrease in air quality. Seems like a very pessimistic way to portray the effect of wildfire smoke. No doubt it has negatively impacted the health of many people, but if other emissions control had not been in effect, the cumulative effect could have been catastrophic.