Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Central Alberta Region Exceeds Air-quality Limits; Environment Minister Shannon Phillips Concerned

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Sep, 2015 03:51 PM
    EDMONTON — Alberta's environment minister says results from a national testing program show the province is on track to have the worst air quality in Canada.
     
    Shannon Phillips said high levels of fine particles in central Alberta pose no immediate health risk, but the findings require immediate action from the provincial government.  
     
    "This includes a review of technology that could be used to reduce harmful emissions," she said after the results were released Wednesday. "We are also looking at the licence review process to see how we can ensure industrial emitters are meeting the new stricter national standards."
     
    She promised a plan to address the situation in about a month.
     
    Phillips said the government is also considering whether to introduce emissions standards for vehicles as part of its ongoing effort to rewrite Alberta's climate change policy.  
     
    The results show the Red Deer region has exceeded levels for fine particulate matter. Those particles form in the presence of sulphur and nitrogen dioxides, the main components of smog.
     
    Although their origin hasn't been pinpointed, the particulates are thought to come from a combination of industrial sources — especially coal-fired power generation — and vehicles.
     
    Four other regions of the province — the lower Athabasca, upper Athabasca, North Saskatchewan and South Saskatchewan — are approaching the same levels seen around Red Deer. Those zones must develop plans to keep their levels from getting worse.
     
    "We are on track to have the worst air quality in Canada," Phillips said.
     
    The measurements are an attempt to gauge general air quality in an area, not to provide health guidance.
     
    The results, the first from testing initiated by the country's environment ministers in 2012, also found significant levels of ozone throughout the province.
     
    The report only looked at particulates and ozone and did not measure for contaminants such as mercury or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, which are considered highly toxic.
     
    However, particulates are capable of being absorbed into the body through breathing. They are believed to be linked to asthma, lung cancer, cardiovascular disease, respiratory diseases, premature delivery and birth defects.
     
    Ozone, while naturally occurring in the upper atmosphere, is thought to harm respiratory function at ground level.
     
    Air-quality concerns were also recently expressed for an industrial area northeast of Edmonton, where a U.S. lab found short-lived plumes of highly toxic chemicals such as benzene.
     
    Phillips was cautious about the possibility of expanding Alberta's air monitoring. 
     
    "What we're focused on is preparing the management responses to this new set of ... standards."
     
    She said the government is considering its overall approach to monitoring as part of a new environmental policy framework.
     
    The Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment said Wednesday's results are no surprise and called for the phase-out of coal-fired power generation in the province.
     
    “There are viable economic, non-polluting alternatives that can be brought in fairly quickly to produce rapid improvements in air quality,” said spokesman Dr. Joe Vipond.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Photo Project With The New Yorker Magazine Features Residential School Survivors

    Photo Project With The New Yorker Magazine Features Residential School Survivors
    International photojournalist Daniella Zalcman has partnered with The New Yorker magazine to show her project on Canada's residential school survivors.

    Photo Project With The New Yorker Magazine Features Residential School Survivors

    Manitoba Government Adds Support Money For Syrian Refugees

    Premier Greg Selinger says an extra $40,000 is being given to settlement service providers in the province, so that they can accommodate hundreds more refugees in the coming months.

    Manitoba Government Adds Support Money For Syrian Refugees

    First Byelection Since NDP Victory In Alberta Goes To Wildrose Party

    First Byelection Since NDP Victory In Alberta Goes To Wildrose Party
    Wildrose Leader Brian Jean, a former Conservative MP under Harper, told party supporters to take a short breather before getting back to the campaign grind.

    First Byelection Since NDP Victory In Alberta Goes To Wildrose Party

    Conservative Yukon Election Candidate Makes Late-night Arrest Of Sign Vandal

    Conservative Yukon Election Candidate Makes Late-night Arrest Of Sign Vandal
    WHITEHORSE — A Conservative federal election candidate in Yukon donned in camouflage gear emerged from the bush on a dark, rainy night to catch someone vandalizing his campaign signs.

    Conservative Yukon Election Candidate Makes Late-night Arrest Of Sign Vandal

    Judge Reserves Decision On Challenge Of Montana's Execution Methods

    Judge Reserves Decision On Challenge Of Montana's Execution Methods
    CALGARY — A judge has reserved his decision on a constitutional challenge of Montana's execution methods that is likely to impact a Canadian on death row there.

    Judge Reserves Decision On Challenge Of Montana's Execution Methods

    No 300,000 Fine For NHL Owner Who Damaged B.c. Fish Habitat: B.c. Supreme Court

    Tom Gaglardi and his company, Northland Properties, were convicted in provincial court in August 2014 on two counts each of harmful alteration of a fish habitat.

    No 300,000 Fine For NHL Owner Who Damaged B.c. Fish Habitat: B.c. Supreme Court