‘State of the Air’ Report Reveals Lincoln is One of the Cleanest Cities

American Lung Association 2023 “State of the Air” report highlights air quality in Lincoln and across the nation
Lincoln was named one of the top cities in the nation with the cleanest air, according to the American Lung Association’s 2023 “State of the Air” report, which was released today. Nationally, the report found that nearly 120 million people, or more than one in three, in the U.S. live in counties that had unhealthy levels of ozone or particle pollution.

The Lung Association’s 24th annual “State of the Air” report grades Americans’ exposure to unhealthy levels of ground-level ozone air pollution, annual particle pollution and short-term spikes in particle pollution over a three-year period. This year’s report covers 2019-2021.

The Lincoln-Beatrice metropolitan area appears on the cleanest cities list for all three pollutants in State of the Air 2023, with zero unhealthy ozone pollution days and zero unhealthy particle pollution days. This is the same as in last year’s report. Further, Lincoln appears on the cleanest cities list for annual particle pollution levels, with the same annual particle pollution levels in the past report. (Lincoln appears as the 22nd cleanest city in the United States for annual particle levels).  

“Here in Lincoln and across the nation, we are seeing ozone pollution improving, thanks in big part to the success of the Clean Air Act. But there is more work to do,” said Sara Prem, Advocacy Director for the Lung Association. “Even one poor air quality day is one too many for our residents at highest risk, such as children, older adults, individuals who are pregnant and those living with chronic lung disease. That’s why we are calling on lawmakers at the local, state and federal levels to take action to ensure that everyone has clean air to breathe.”

Nationally, the report found that ozone pollution has generally improved across the nation, thanks in large part to the success of the Clean Air Act. However, more work remains to fully clean up harmful pollution, and short-term particle pollution continues to get worse. In addition, some communities bear a greater burden of air pollution. Out of the nearly 120 million people who live in areas with unhealthy air quality, a disproportionate number – more than 64 million (54%) – are people of color. In fact, people of color were 64% more likely than white people to live in a county with a failing grade for at least one measure, and 3.7 times as likely to live in a county with failing grades for all three measures.

The American Lung Association is calling on President Biden to urgently move forward on several measures to clean up air pollution nationwide, including new pollution limits on ozone and particle pollution and new measures to clean up power plants and vehicles. See the full report results and sign the petition at Lung.org/SOTA.

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For more information, contact:

Janye Killelea
312-940-7624
[email protected]

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