American Lung Association Report: Utah Recieves Poor Grades for Ozone and Particle Pollution

American Lung Association’s 25th Annual “State of the Air” report highlights air quality in Utah and across the nation.

The American Lung Association’s 25th annual “State of the Air” report highlights that despite decades of strong progress in cleaning the air, Utah still faces difficult air pollution challenges.

The Lung Association’s 25th annual “State of the Air” report grades 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 includes air quality data from 2020-2022 and is updated to reflect the new annual particle pollution standard that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finalized in February.

“In the 25 years that the American Lung Association has been doing our ‘State of the Air’ report, we have seen incredible improvement in our nation’s air quality. Unfortunately, more than 131 million people still live in places with unhealthy levels of air pollution, Salt Lake City is listed as one of the worst places for ozone pollution,” said Nick Torres, Advocacy Director for the American Lung Association. “Climate change is making air pollution more likely to form and more difficult to clean up, so we are calling on EPA to set long-overdue stronger national limits on ozone pollution.”

The “State of the Air” report looked at levels of ozone “smog,” the air pollutant affecting the largest number of people in the United States. The Salt Lake metro area ranked 9th worst in the nation for ozone pollution. The ranking was based on the area’s worst county’s average number of unhealthy days—24 days per year, an F grade, in Salt Lake County. This was worse than the area's ranking in last year's report of 10th worst, with 23 days per year, an F grade. The report also tracked short-term spikes in particle pollution, which can be extremely dangerous and even deadly. The Salt Lake City metro area ranked 19th worst in the nation for short-term particle pollution. The ranking was based on the area’s worst county’s average number of unhealthy days—9.8 days per year, an F grade, in Salt Lake County.

For the year-round average level of particle pollution, the area’s worst county, Salt Lake County, received a failing grade for pollution levels above the federal standard that was recently updated by the United States Environmental Protection Agency. The Salt Lake City metro area ranked 37th worst in the nation. This was better than the area's ranking in last year's report of 32nd worst in the nation. One Utah city ranked among the nation’s cleanest for year-round particle pollution. St. George ranked 9th in this year’s report, which was two spots worse than last year’s rank.

The “State of the Air” report looked at levels of ozone “smog,” the air pollutant affecting the largest number of people in the United States. The Logan metro area ranked 79th worst in the nation for ozone pollution. The ranking was based on the area’s worst county’s average number of unhealthy days—1 day per year, a C grade, in Cache County. The Logan metro area ranked 21st worst in the nation for short-term particle pollution. The ranking was based on the area’s worst county’s average number of unhealthy days—7.8 days per year, an F grade. Cache County received a passing grade for pollution levels below the federal standard that was recently updated by the United States Environmental Protection Agency.

The “State of the Air” report found that nationally, more than 131 million people live in an area that received a failing grade for at least one measure of air pollution, and 43.9 million people live in areas with failing grades for all three measures. In the three years covered by this report, individuals in the U.S. experienced the highest number of days when particle pollution reached “very unhealthy” and “hazardous” levels in the history of reporting the “State of the Air.” Communities of color are disproportionately exposed to unhealthy air and are also more likely to be living with one or more chronic conditions that make them more vulnerable to air pollution, including asthma, diabetes and heart disease. The report found that a person of color in the U.S. is more than twice as likely as a white individual to live in a community with a failing grade on all three pollution measures.

Both ozone and particle pollution can cause premature death and other serious health effects such as asthma attacks, heart attacks, strokes, preterm births and impaired cognitive functioning later in life. Particle pollution can also cause lung cancer.

EPA recently finalized new air pollution rules that will help clean up particle pollution and address climate change. Now, the Lung Association is urging EPA to set long overdue stronger national limits on ozone pollution. Stronger limits would help people protect themselves and drive cleanup of polluting sources across the country. See the full report results and sign the petition at Lung.org/SOTA.

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