Relevant Laws and Prevention Strategies
U.S. Congress passed the Clean Air Acts in 1970, 1977, and Directs the EPA to establish national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) for six outdoor criteria pollutants.
For the most part, this act has been very successful with meaningful drops in the six criteria pollutants since its passage. Primary PollutantReduction Percentage (2003 EPA report) Lead93% Carbon Monoxide41% VOCs40% Particulate Matter (<10 microns) (<2.5 microns) 34% 8% Sulfur Dioxide33% Nitrogen Oxide15% Ground Level Ozone14%
Continuing to rely on pollution cleanup rather than prevention. Ban on leaded gasoline attributed to major drop in this pollutant, yet other substances have not been banned. Congress has not required increase in the fuel- efficiency standards for vehicles. Inadequate regulation of two-cycle gasoline engines. Lawn mowers, leaf blowers, jet skis, etc. 1-hour ride on a typical jet ski produces the same amount of pollution as the average car does in 1 year. No regulation of oceangoing ships in American ports. Clean Air Acts do not deal with reducing emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. Nothing to deal with indoor pollution BETTER ENFORCEMNT
STATIONARY SOURCEMOTOR VEHICLE Burn low-sulfur coal Remove sulfur from coal Convert coal to a liquid or gaseous fuel Shift to less polluting fuels Disperse emissions above thermal inversion layer Remove pollutants after combustion Tax each unit of pollution produced Mass transit Bicycles and walking Less polluting engines Improve fuel efficiency Remove older cars Give tax incentives for buying energy-efficient cars Restrict driving in polluted areas Car exhaust inspections Stricter emission standards