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Contacts: Linda Joy/NOAA 301-734-1165; EPA
Press Office
202-564-6794;
Jason Surbey/OSHA 202-693-4668
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 21, 2010
NOAA Releases Data Report on Air Quality Measurements
Near the Deepwater Horizon/BP Oil Spill Area
Findings are consistent with EPA, OSHA data
NOAA
scientists today released a data report on air quality
measurements taken in June in the vicinity of the Deepwater
Horizon/BP oil spill area. The report, available online at
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/csd/tropchem/2010gulf/GulfReport.pdf,
summarizes the levels of nearly 100 air pollutants measured with
sophisticated air sampling instruments onboard a NOAA WP-3D
research aircraft.
Scientists found common air pollutants, such as ozone, nitrogen
oxides and carbon monoxide, in amounts typical of urban areas in
U.S. cities. However, 15 to 70 kilometers downwind from the oil
spill, concentrations of certain hydrocarbons were much higher
than found in typical polluted air. Particulate matter downwind
of the oil slick was comparable to concentrations in moderately
polluted urban air, but the particles were almost entirely
organic material, as opposed to those typically found in urban
particulate matter. Scientists also measured large amounts of
black carbon in smoke from a controlled burn of crude oil on the
water.
“Data
from the NOAA flights are providing an important detailed and
independent set of air quality data to assess air quality risks
of workers at sea and the public ashore,” said A. R.
Ravishankara, director of the Chemical Sciences Division of
NOAA’s Earth System Research Laboratory, who led the science
team.
NOAA
scientists measured the air pollutants in four areas, including
in the immediate vicinity of the spill, downwind from the spill,
and along the Mississippi, Alabama and Florida coastlines. They
also measured “background” air in an area far from the spill to
serve as a control sample. In analyzing the levels of the
pollutants, scientists compared them to typical concentrations
of a polluted U.S. urban
area.
The
near-shore measurements, 30 to 40 kilometers from shore, showed
pollution concentrations generally lower than those typically
found in urban areas. The background air was relatively free of
pollution from the oil spill. A summary of the measurements is
provided in Tables 1 and 2 of the report.
The
air chemistry flights were conducted to support the efforts of
the Environmental Protection Agency and Occupational Safety and
Health Administration to assess air quality for coastal
residents and oil spill response workers.
“EPA
has been monitoring air quality along the Gulf Coast since the
start of this incident to ensure that residents have the best
possible information on the air quality, and the data in this
report are generally consistent with EPA’s findings,” said Gina
McCarthy, EPA’s Assistant Administrator for the Office of Air
and Radiation. “EPA will continue to work with NOAA, other
federal agencies and independent scientists to effectively
monitor air quality and to provide
residents living
along the coast with the best possible information about the air
they are breathing.”
“In order to
evaluate worker exposure, OSHA has been conducting its own air
monitoring in the Gulf, as well as reviewing all additional
available data. Our findings are consistent with NOAA’s data,”
says Dr. David Michaels, Assistant Secretary of Labor for
Occupational Safety and Health. “We will continue to work
closely with all other Federal Agencies to monitor the health
and safety hazards facing workers involved in the oil spill
response.”
The report offers a
highly detailed snapshot of the concentrations of hydrocarbons
and other organic chemicals, particulate matter, ozone, carbon
monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, peroxyacetyl nitrate and a host of
other air pollutants in the Gulf in early June. Measurements
were taken from as low as 60 meters above
sea level and up to 1,000 meters above sea level, with most
flight tracks being about 150 meters above the Gulf.
In
order to conduct the air sampling, NOAA temporarily diverted the
WP-3D plane from its planned participation in the CalNex
research mission, a multi-agency field study on California
climate change and air quality issues. NOAA scientists
recognized that the well-instrumented plane could help in
meeting the need to understand how the oil spill was affecting
air quality.
NOAA’s mission is to
understand and predict changes in the Earth's environment, from
the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and conserve
and manage our coastal and marine resources. Visit us
online
or on
Facebook.
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On the Web:
NOAA Earth System
Research Laboratory:
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov
P3 Flights:
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/csd/tropchem/2010gulf
NOAA Science
Missions, Data:
http://www.noaa.gov/sciencemissions/bpoilspill.html
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