Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-badair12jan12,0,421853.story?coll=la-home-todays-times
Carbon
monoxide levels have plummeted in the region, thanks largely to better
emission- control devices and reformulated fuel.
By
Gary Polakovic
Times
Staff Writer
January
12 2003
Victory
over one of the most intractable pollutants in the Los Angeles region is close
at hand, thanks to a decades-long effort to cut auto exhaust.
Since
the first Model Ts rolled off the assembly line, cars and trucks have been
veritable carbon monoxide machines. The potentially deadly colorless, odorless
gas -- linked to heart attacks, asphyxiation and birth defects -- is a product
of inefficient combustion.
Few
places in the nation have suffered as severely as the Los Angeles region, home
to 10 million vehicles. Despite so much traffic, just one day of unhealthful
carbon monoxide has occurred across Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San
Bernardino counties in the last two years. No violations have been reported so
far this winter.
Air
quality officials have their fingers crossed. If no more violations occur this
year, the region can be removed from the list of cities where the pollutant is
a health hazard.
"The
reduction of carbon monoxide is really another great success story in air
pollution control in Southern California. This is another major pollutant that we
have cleaned up on the road to clean air," said Sam Atwood, spokesman for
the South Coast Air Quality Management District.
Improved
auto emission-control devices and reformulated gasoline, beginning in the late 1980s,
have been largely responsible for the reductions.
Although
a 2002 poll of Californians found that people believe pollution is getting
worse, the Southland's air quality has improved dramatically over the last
decade. Carbon monoxide is the fourth major pollutant targeted under the Clean
Air Act to be tamed in the Los Angeles Basin. The others are nitrogen dioxide
from power plants, factories and auto exhaust; sulfur dioxide, an industrial
pollutant; and lead from gasoline.
Nevertheless,
the region still has some of the nation's dirtiest air, because of continuing
problems with ozone, soot and dust. Those pollutants must be significantly
curtailed by 2010, although even that wouldn't completely clean the air.
A
generation ago, unhealthful levels of carbon monoxide were present one day in
three across a wide swath of the basin. During the mid-1970s, unsafe
concentrations of the pollutant spread from Reseda to Costa Mesa, from downtown
Los Angeles to San Bernardino. Since then, the pollutant has all but
disappeared from Orange County and the San Fernando and San Gabriel valleys.
The
only remaining carbon monoxide hot spot is Lynwood, south of downtown Los
Angeles. Peculiar circumstances conspire against that community.
Carbon
monoxide is unlike other pollutants because it is trouble from the moment it
spews out of a tailpipe. Tens of thousands of cars whizzing along the Century
Freeway to Los Angeles International Airport or along the Long Beach Freeway
bathe Lynwood in emissions.
Also,
because of a quirk of human engineering and nature, the concrete-lined Los
Angeles River functions as a drainpipe, funneling emissions from traffic in
downtown Los Angeles to Lynwood, said Joe Cassmassi, senior meteorologist for
the AQMD. Winter is when the worst carbon monoxide pollution occurs, because
colder temperatures cause smog-control devices on cars to be less effective,
and unusually low atmospheric inversions concentrate pollutants over the
central city.
Nevertheless,
the pollutant is in rapid retreat even in Lynwood. Only one day of unhealthful
pollution occurred there last year, and none was reported in 2001. By contrast,
excessive pollution occurred there 30 days annually a decade ago, according to
the AQMD.
Calexico,
where cars from Mexico that lack up-to-date emission controls are common, is
the only other California city to violate the carbon monoxide standard,
according to the EPA.
The
hard-to-detect gas is what can kill people inside idling cars in garages or
when hibachi-style barbecues are used, ill-advisedly, indoors. Unlike other
pollutants, it does not directly affect the lungs. Rather, it displaces oxygen
in the blood, causing internal asphyxiation. More commonly, it can cause
dizziness, chest pain and angina.
One
recent study by researchers at UCLA showed that women exposed to high levels of
carbon monoxide and ozone were three times more likely to have babies with
heart-valve defects than other women. Other studies have found that carbon
monoxide can cause angina and irregular heart rhythms in Los Angeles commuters
with preexisting heart conditions, said Dr. Henry Gong, professor of preventive
medicine at USC.
As cars have become cleaner and cleaner, carbon monoxide levels have fallen throughout California. A new car today produces one gram of carbon monoxide per mile of driving, down from 23 grams in 1970, according to the state Air Resources Board. As more new cars with advanced emission-control systems, running on reformulated fuels, take to the streets, carbon monoxide levels are falling 5% a year in California.