Current:Home > InvestResearchers find higher levels of dangerous chemical than expected in southeast Louisiana--DB Wealth Institute B2 Reviews Insights
Researchers find higher levels of dangerous chemical than expected in southeast Louisiana
View Date:2025-01-20 00:26:13
Researchers using high-tech air monitoring equipment rolled through an industrialized stretch of southeast Louisiana in mobile labs and found levels of a carcinogen in concentrations as much as 10 times higher than previously estimated, according to a paper published Tuesday in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.
The study by researchers at Johns Hopkins University raises new health concerns for communities that sit among the chemical plants lining a stretch of the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans — dubbed “cancer alley” by environmentalists.
The Environmental Protection Agency considers long-term exposure to inhaled ethylene oxide gas a cancer risk — a stance challenged by the chemical industry. The state of California, which has its own environmental health agency, also lists the chemical as “known to cause cancer and reproductive toxicity” in men and women.
The study also heralds newer technologies that enable better, more accurate measurements of ethylene oxide and other chemicals.
“The instrumentation technology that we have available to us is just much more sensitive and can be put on vans and driven around in ways that you don’t get with regulatory instruments,” said Pete DeCarlo, one of the researchers on the study.
Ethylene oxide is produced in large amounts and used to make a main ingredient in antifreeze and polyester. It’s also used to sterilize food, cosmetics and medical equipment and as a pesticide.
The report comes as the Biden administration has taken steps to lessen people’s exposure to the gas. Earlier this year, EPA announced plans to limit the use of the chemical. And ethylene oxide also figures in a broad order issued in April requiring more than 200 plants nationwide to reduce toxic emissions.
Traditionally, measurements of ethylene oxide have been made by gathering and storing air samples in stainless steel cannisters for later lab analyses. The problem, DeCarlo said, is that storage in the cannisters appears to alter the concentration of the gas.
Current regulatory figures on ethylene oxide levels are based on samples self-reported by the industry. Those numbers, he said, are “anywhere from two to 10 times lower than the values that we measured with our mobile laboratory in Louisiana.”
The Johns Hopkins study involved two vans that drove the same routes repeatedly over the course of a month last year. Researchers used instruments that measure gases in real time as they flow through a high-intensity light. The vans used two different instruments, yet they measured similar results, bolstering researchers’ confidence in the testing.
DeCarlo said nearly all the readings were higher than 11 parts of ethylene oxide per 1 trillion parts of air — a level that translates to a one in 10,000 cancer risk for long-term exposure to the gas. That’s the upper threshold of what the EPA considers acceptable for many air toxics and carcinogens.
Sometimes levels were a thousand times higher — measured in parts per billion rather than per trillion. And, notes Keeve Nachman, another of the Johns Hopkins researchers, ethylene oxide is only one of the pollutants emitted in the area.
“When you think about all the other chemicals that are in play and all of the other concerns that we may have about people who live in Cancer Alley and the other life stressors they have to deal with, they may be less resilient to an exposure to ethylene oxide than someone in the general population,” Nachman said. “So, you know, if if you were to say, what’s the appropriate level or what should the acceptable risk be? It should probably be lower than 1 in 10,000 people out there.”
Short-term exposure to the levels poses little risk to the vast majority of people, said Reed Rustin, a professor at Tulane University’s School of Public Health, who was not involved in the study.
“My concern would be for at-risk individuals who are exposed over a lifetime, which is difficult to estimate, but should be a concern to investigate further,” Rustin said.
The American Chemical Council has questioned what it called “a deeply flawed’’ method to determine the toxicity of ethylene oxide.
Tuesday’s report is likely to feed into ongoing political and legal battles over the array of chemical plants among small, often predominantly Black communities between Baton Rouge and New Orleans.
Amid such debates, improving measurements of pollutants is important, DeCarlo said, noting there is little high quality measurement around industrial plants, so it’s not well understood what residents are actually exposed to.
”We wanted to start to do a better job of assessing what those hazardous air pollutant concentrations look like for communities who live in and around industrial facilities,” he said.
veryGood! (513)
Related
- Powerball winning numbers for Nov. 13 drawing: Jackpot rises to $113 million
- Prince Harry 'won't bring my wife back' to the UK over safety concerns due to tabloids
- Iron coated teeth, venom and bacteria: A Komodo dragon's tool box for ripping apart prey
- Why does Greece go first at the Olympics? What to know about parade of nations tradition
- Only 8 monkeys remain free after more than a week outside a South Carolina compound
- How many US athletes are competing at 2024 Paris Olympics? Full Team USA roster
- Hope you aren’t afraid of clowns: See Spirit Halloween’s 2024 animatronic line
- It’s Brat Girl Summer: Here’s Everything You Need to Unleash Your Feral Party Girl Energy
- Cowboys owner Jerry Jones responds to CeeDee Lamb's excuse about curtains at AT&T Stadium
- Autopsy findings confirm Sonya Massey, Black woman shot by deputy, died from gunshot wound to head
Ranking
- Ryan Reynolds Clarifies Taylor Swift’s Role as Godmother to His Kids With Blake Lively
- TikToker Chris Olsen Tearfully Shares He’s a Victim of Revenge Porn
- Joel Embiid embraces controversy, gives honest take on LeBron James at Paris Olympics
- Nebraska’s EV conundrum: Charging options can get you places, but future will require growth
- DWTS' Gleb Savchenko Shares Why He Ended Brooks Nader Romance Through Text Message
- Mallory Swanson leads USWNT to easy win in Paris Olympics opener: Recap, highlights
- Elon Musk’s Ex Grimes Shares Support for His Daughter Vivian After Comments on Gender Identity
- Olympic medals today: What is the medal count at 2024 Paris Games on Friday?
Recommendation
-
West Virginia governor-elect Morrisey to be sworn in mid-January
-
Can Randy Arozarena save the free-falling Seattle Mariners?
-
Bird flu worries prompt changes to popular ‘Miracle of Birth Center’ at Minnesota State Fair
-
Dodgers Player Freddie Freeman's 3-Year-Old Son Can't Stand or Walk Amid Viral Infection
-
Gerry Faust, the former head football coach at Notre Dame, has died at 89
-
2024 Olympics: Get to Know Soccer Star Trinity Rodman, Daughter of Dennis Rodman and Michelle Moyer
-
US coastal communities get $575M to guard against floods, other climate disasters
-
Oregon wildfire map: Track 38 uncontrolled blazes that have burned nearly 1 million acres