Evaluating the free market by comparing it to the alternatives (We don't need more regulations, We don't need more price controls, No Socialism in the courtroom, Hey, White House, leave us all alone)
Tuesday, July 30, 2019
U.S. Air Quality Continues to Improve (criteria pollutants decreased by 74 percent between 1970 and 2018)
"The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released its 2019 report on Our Nation’s Air
that details the levels of criteria pollutants that exist in our air,
which have decreased by 74 percent between 1970 and 2018. Criteria
pollutants are precursors of acid rain and are a cause of detrimental
diseases such as asthma. During this period, the U.S. economy increased
275 percent, energy consumption increased almost 50 percent, Americans
drove more miles, and population increased.
The Clean Air Act requires EPA to set national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS) for specific pollutants to safeguard human health and
the environment. EPA established standards for six common air
pollutants, which are referred to as “criteria” pollutants. They are
called “criteria” pollutants because the EPA sets the criteria for
permissible levels. The six criteria pollutants are:
Carbon monoxide (CO)
Lead (Pb)
Nitrogen dioxide (NOx)
Ozone (O3)
Particulate matter (PM2.5 and PM10)
Sulfur dioxide (SO2)
Between 1970 and 2018, the combined emissions of the six common
declined by 74 percent, while the economy increased by 275 percent,
energy consumption increased by 49 percent, vehicles miles traveled
increased by 191 percent, and population increased by 60 percent—a
noteworthy achievement.
According to the Energy Information Administration, sulfur dioxide emissions from U.S. power plants were reduced by 82 percent between 2007 and 2017, and nitrogen oxide emissions were reduced by 58 percent.
These pollutants are the principal pollutants that cause acid
precipitation (colloquially known as acid rain). Their emissions react
with water vapor and other chemicals in the air to form acids that fall
back to earth. Prior to controlling for these emissions, power plants
produced most (about two-thirds) of the sulfur dioxide emissions in the
United States. About 50 percent of nitrogen oxide emissions came from
cars, buses, trucks, and other forms of transportation, with power
plants contributing about 25 percent. The remainder came from other
sources, such as industrial and commercial boilers.
According to the EPA, between 1990 and 2018, the criteria pollutants in the United States declined significantly as follows:
The huge reductions in criteria pollutants have come about mainly
because technology was developed at reasonable cost to reduce these
elements from fossil-fired generating plants. Flue gas desulfurization
units (scrubbers), electrostatic precipitators, fabric filters
(baghouses), select catalytic reduction systems, advanced carbon
injection systems, and direct sorbent injection systems have reduced
sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide emissions.
Furthermore, new generating technologies such as supercritical
coal-fired power plants being built in China and in other countries
substantially reduce these pollutants. China has been building cleaner
coal plants for a decade or so,
at a time when government policies such as the Obama administration’s
“War on Coal” precluded the effective construction of new and cleaner
coal plants in the United States. As a consequence, China, and not the
United States, is building the lion’s share of new supercritical
coal-fired plants around the world.
Conclusion
The United States has cleaner air now than in the past. Legislation
(e.g., the Clean Air Act and its amendments) has contributed to
longstanding pollutant reductions trends. In the power sector,
technology has made this possible, reducing pollutant levels at a
reasonable cost that has enabled electricity to remain affordable."
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