Charleston Leaders, Public Health Advocates Raise Impacts Of Clean Car Rule Rollback On W.Va.

Leaders in West Virginia’s capital city are drawing attention to the local health and economic effects of the Trump administration’s rollback of federal fuel-efficiency rules.

In late March, in the midst of the first surge of coronavirus cases in the U.S., the federal Environmental Protection Agency and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration finalized a two-part rollback of the Obama-era clean car standards. Known as the Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient (SAFE) Vehicles rule, it requires automakers to increase the fuel economy of passenger cars by 1.5 percent each year.

The previous standards set by President Obama in 2012 mandated a 5 percent annual increase in fuel economy.

“The [sic] standards provide numerous benefits to Charleston families, including reducing air pollution in our city and saving families money at the pump,” said Charleston City Council member Chuck Overstreet. “The last thing that we need to be doing during this public health and economic crisis is gutting standards that protect our health and put more money back into the pockets of the folks across our community.”

Speakers at Thursday’s virtual press conference noted the high rates of asthma and other respiratory diseases among West Virginians.  According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in 2018, West Virginia was tied with Maine for having the highest percent of residents with the chronic disease, at 12.3 percent.

Cabell, Kanawha, Ohio and Wood counties had four or more days with unhealthy ozone levels, according to the American Lung Association’s 2019 annual report. Ozone is a powerful lung irritant that can exacerbate asthma attacks and make it hard for people with lung diseases, like COPD, to breathe. The Lung Association gave those counties a “c” letter grade.

Del. Mike Pushkin, a Democrat who represents Kanawha County, also noted the clean car rule rollback hurts West Virginians’ pocketbooks, at a time when thousands of residents are out of work due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“The one who gets hurt the most … it’s the consumer at the pump,” he said. “Our working families there will have to pay more to gas up their cars.”

Under the 2012 rule, automakers were to produce vehicles that would average about 47 miles per gallon by 2025. Cars under the new proposal will average 37 miles per gallon. Greenhouse gas emissions are also expected to rise by nearly a billion tons. 

EPA officials said the new rule “strikes the right regulatory balance for the environment, the auto industry, the economy, safety and American families.”

The speakers, which also included Charleston City Councilmember Robert Sheets and Robin Blakeman with the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition and West Virginia Interfaith Power & Light, encouraged concerned residents to reach out to members of West Virginia’s congressional delegation.

The rule is being challenged in court by more than 20 states and environmental groups.

Air Pollution Improves Across West Virginia, Smog Worsens

Air quality across West Virginia is improving, with levels of fine particle air pollution some of the best ever measured, but smog levels have increased, according to the American Lung Association’s annual “State of the Air” report released today.

The 2018 report finds that West Virginia metro areas, such as Charleston, Morgantown, Fairmont, Parkersburg and Huntington, beat the national standard when it came to levels of fine particle, or soot, pollution.

Fine particle pollution includes tiny bits of dust released by coal-fired power plants, diesel-burning vehicles, wildfires and wood-burning stoves. This type of pollution can trigger asthma attacks, heart attacks and strokes if the small particles get lodged in the lungs.

It was a different story for ozone pollution. Ozone is a powerful lung irritant that can exacerbate asthma attacks and make it hard for people with lung diseases, like COPD, to breathe.

The report found only Greenbrier County held on to its “A” grade. Several areas saw an increase in unhealthy days for ozone including in Wheeling, Charleston and Huntington.

Kevin Stewart, director of environmental health for the American Lung Association of the Mid-Atlantic, said those trends were consistent across the nation.

Credit American Lung Association
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Kevin Stewart, director of environmental health for the American Lung Association of the Mid-Atlantic

“We’ve been hoping over time, we’d be able to continue this trend into very good grades,” he said. “And in fact, in last year’s report it was something that was very remarkable in terms of the number of counties that showed very good grades. It’s a little disappointing this year around to find that we’re doing a little bit of backtracking.”

The report said a warming climate may help explain the boost in unhealthy ozone pollution levels; 2016 was the second-hottest year on record, and high air temperatures accelerate ozone production.

“We know that ozone is not something that is produced directly out of smokestacks and tailpipes, but rather the precursors to ozone air pollution are emitted and then cook in the atmosphere especially in hot, sunny, still summer days,” Stewart said. “Those circumstances are exacerbated when air temperatures are higher than normal and there’s a lot of sunlight.”

The report analyzed air quality data collected by federal, state and local air monitoring devices between 2014 and 2016, the most recent data available. Data was collected in 10 West Virginia counties.

Manchin Responds to Proposed Tightened Air Pollution Standards

  The federal Environmental Protection Agency’s public comment period on proposed stricter ozone standards closes this week. Many health and medical professionals across the country are urging the EPA to adopt the standard. Meanwhile, West Virginia’s senator Joe Manchin introduced legislation that would block the measure.

A panel of science advisors to the EPA unanimously concluded that the agency should tighten ozone regulations. The American Lung Association says in a release that additional regulations would protect those most vulnerable to the effects of air pollution, including children, seniors and people with asthma and other chronic lung diseases.

But Senator Manchin says it’s too costly to the economy. He joined with the Republican senator from South Dakota, John Thune, in introducing the Clean Air, Strong Economies Act which would slow regulatory measures down.

In 2008 the permitted level of ground-level ozone, or smog, was lowered from 85 parts per billion to 75. The EPA is now proposing lowering that standard to within the range of 70-65 parts per billion. In a release, Manchin reports that industry estimates a 65 ppb standard would shut down approximately a third of all coal-fired power plant capacity.

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