Smog Worst
in Ontario History as Hot Weather Hurts Air Quality
By MARTIN MITTELSTAEDT
THE GLOBE AND MAIL
Tuesday, September 10, 2002 - Print Edition, Page A11
Hit by a double whammy
of exceptionally hot weather and almost no rain, Southern Ontario
is experiencing the worst bout of smog that residents of the region
with Canada's most notorious air pollution have ever had to endure.
There have been 26
days, covering nearly a third of the summer and including yesterday,
during which the air was projected to be so polluted by vehicle
exhaust and emissions from smokestacks that breathing was considered
a health hazard.
Some researchers
are warning the poor air quality in parts of Ontario is approaching
U.S. levels, with Toronto starting to have pollution readings
more typically found in big U.S. cities, such as New York, where
residents receive chronic, long-term exposure to the harmful compounds
in dirty air.
"We are probably
quite similar to New York City. I would say they are slightly
higher, but not that far off" Toronto levels, said Jeffrey
Brook, a research scientist at Environment Canada.
Toronto and New York
have a heavy pollution burden from the high local use of automobiles
and from local industries, he said, but also suffer from the long-range
transportation of pollutants from coal-fired electricity-generating
stations in the U.S. Midwest.
The smog is being
caused by the unusually hot weather, which is projected to continue
today, with readings above 30 throughout much of the province.
There has been "relentless heat" this summer in Southern
Ontario, Environment Canada climate expert David Phillips says.
Since June 1, Toronto
has experienced 38 days during which the temperature exceeded
30. In a normal year, there are 15 such days.
As well, there have
been 18 nights during which the mercury did not fall below 20,
compared to a normal reading of only five such nights.
The hot weather has
prompted the extreme air pollution because high temperature causes
the emissions from tailpipes and smokestacks to undergo chemical
reactions and form smog, Mr. Phillips said.
The number of days
projected by the provincial Ministry of Environment this year
to have poor air quality has already eclipsed the record of 23
set last year, ministry spokesman John Steele says.
Of the current air-pollution
advisory, he said this is the first time one been issued this
late in the year.
Normally, cooler
temperatures in early September would lead to lower pollution
readings than earlier in the summer.
Also, Toronto hasn't
had a heavy rainfall since June 21, and has just had its driest
August on record, further contributing to the oppressive blanket
of smog, Mr. Phillips said.
Normally, rain would
wash some of the pollutants out of the air, he said, but that
hasn't happened.
Southern Ontario
has not been alone in dealing with dirty air.
The high smog readings
have frequently extended into Southern Quebec and the Maritimes.
Atlantic Canada, where the air is normally clean, received nine
advisories this summer, three times the average level.
Environment Canada's
Mr. Brook said the air-quality problems of Southern Ontario are
the worst in the country, and far more extreme than what is experienced
in the most polluted area of the West, around Vancouver and the
Lower Fraser Valley.
"We are generally
10 times higher in some of the key pollutants compared to them,
even during their [smog episodes], so we're kind of in a different
league," he said.
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