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magazine / apr08

April 2008 issue


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Smog signals
Burn fossil fuels, and you get nitrogen dioxide, a nasty pollutant that’s fouling the air around the globe
By Steven Fick and Elizabeth Shilts

It may look pretty, but this global view reveals one ugly problem. Researchers at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute have pinpointed hot spots of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) pollution in the troposphere, the air we breathe.

Traffic, power plants, heavy industry and oil refineries are the biggest emitters of NO2, a gas created when fossil fuels are burned, so it’s not surprising that the skies over much of the world’s emerging industrial powerhouse, China, are now clouded with the pollutant. Emissions of NO2 in Shanghai, one of the fastest-growing cities in the world, have increased by 29 percent a year since 1996. It ranks with Los Angeles and Mexico City as the urban areas with the highest NO2 concentrations in the world.



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An extremely reactive gas, NO2 combines with tiny particles in the air to create the reddish brown smog that hangs over larger cities in the summer and plays a role in the production of ground-level ozone, both of which have been blamed for a host of respiratory problems. The World Health Organization has estimated that such air pollution reduces the life of the average European by 8.6 months.

NO2 emitted by oil sands plants in Fort McMurray, Alta., and refineries east of Edmonton leaves smudges on the map, as does NO2 from individual power plants in Chandrapur and Ramagundam in India and oil refineries around the Persian Gulf. The bright red blight in South Africa is centred in the Highveld area outside Johannesburg, where a number of power plants sit on a plateau. High altitude lengthens the lifespan of NO2 in the air.

Cleaner technology in cars and power plants in Europe and eastern North America has led to declines in NO2 in those regions over the past decade, but huge increases in emissions in East Asia mean the air will remain hazy and hazardous for millions of people for years to come.

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