New Ozone Regulations Will Save Lots of Imaginary People

Shaghai-air-pollution
The skyline of Shanghai, China showing air pollution

Guest essay by Charles Battig

Now I can finally relax, take a deep breath, and breathe easier.  The Environmental Protection Agency, an aggressive arm of the nanny government, has just issued new air quality standards that mandate that the new “safe” level of ozone in the air we breathe shall be lowered from the current 75 parts per billion to 70 ppb.  I feel better already, perhaps.

I also feel better for all the theoretical lives that will be saved, according to EPA sponsored studies such as this one.  However, my joy is tempered by the realization that  those are not real lives saved – rather, they are “estimated deaths saved,” as in “We applied health impact assessment methodology to estimate numbers of deaths and other adverse health outcomes that would have been avoided during 2005, 2006, and 2007 if the current (or lower) NAAQS ozone standards had been met. Estimated reductions in ozone concentrations were interpolated according to geographic area and year, and concentration–response functions were obtained or derived from the epidemiological literature.

Thus, the fewer ozone deaths will be taking place in a computer-generated fantasy world, where epidemiological data-torturing takes place by bits and bytes, not in the hospital admission records for real-life patients.  The referenced paper concludes:

“We estimated that annual numbers of avoided ozone-related premature deaths would have ranged from 1, 410 to 2, 480 at 75 ppb to 2, 450 to 4, 130 at 70 ppb, and 5, 210 to 7, 990 at 60 ppb. Acute respiratory symptoms would have been reduced by 3 million cases and school-loss days by 1 million cases annually if the current 75-ppb standard had been attained. Substantially greater health benefits would have resulted if the CASAC-recommended range of standards (70–60 ppb) had been met.”

Such papers are used to justify the EPA’s claims that “[s]tudies indicate that exposure to ozone at levels below 75 ppb — the level of the current standard – can pose serious threats to public health, harm the respiratory system, cause or aggravate asthma and other lung diseases, and is linked to premature death from respiratory and cardiovascular causes.”  Lowering of atmospheric ozone concentration is presented as a win for health and associated increased energy costs:

“EPA estimates that the benefits of meeting the proposed standards will significantly outweigh the costs. If the standards are finalized, every dollar we invest to meet them will return up to three dollars in health benefits. These large health benefits will be gained from avoiding asthma attacks, heart attacks, missed school days and premature deaths, among other health effects valued at $6.4 to $13 billion annually in 2025 for a standard of 70 ppb, and $19 to $38 billion annually in 2025 for a standard of 65 ppb. Annual costs are estimated at $3.9 billion in 2025 for a standard of 70 ppb, and $15 billion for a standard at 65 ppb.”

As a physician, I am intrigued, if not put off, by the EPA concept of “premature deaths.”  How am I to know that that unfortunate patient, who has just died, died prematurely?  If asked, he would undoubtedly claim that he had died before his time, no matter the actual cause.  All deaths are “premature” when viewed subjectively.  The answer lies within the all-knowing, EPA-sponsored computers, as in “health assessment methodology” that claim the ability to define who died before their time.

When independent epidemiological researchers examine real-world patients, real-world hospital admissions, and real-world medical records, the EPA health claims are not validated.  In smoggy central California, such a study reported:

“Average ground-level ozone (O3) and fine particulate matter (PM2.5) measurements were not correlated with 19,327 patient admissions for asthma at the University of California-Davis Medical Center (UCDMC) during 2010-2012.”  Another study concluded: “Overwhelming epidemiologic evidence now indicates that there is no relationship in California between PM and total mortality [also known as ‘premature deaths.’]”  Yet another study: “[T]he empirical evidence is that current levels of air quality, ozone and PM2.5, are not causally related to acute deaths for California. An empirical and logical case can be made air quality is not causally related to acute deaths for the rest of the United States.”

Surely smoggy air must be unhealthy.  It must be, because it looks so bad.  The poster child for such smoggy air is Shanghai, China, where newspaper pictures depict a yellow haze obscuring the visibility of buildings.  However, the average lifespan there is 82.5 years, bettering the reported lifespan in any major U.S. city.

Surely pristine nature would be the place to avoid smoggy air.  Millions visit the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, in spite of the off-putting name.  When it is nature, it is smoky; when man-made, it is smog.  Yet the basic chemical process is the same.  Native conifers emit organic compounds known as terpenes, which interact with sunlight to produce…smog.  Few park visitors are reported being victims of “premature death” secondary to breathing polluted air.

One final reason not to expect the EPA’s claims of ozone reduction and resultant saving of premature deaths of asthma victims to materialize is that the root cause of asthma is not completely known.  It may be hereditary, and it may be secondary to environmental factors, or some combination thereof.  A variety of factors can trigger an asthma attack in a susceptible individual.  It maybe exercise, cold air, or indoor antigens.  The Wall Street Journal October 1, 2015 article “Asthma Linked to Missing Bacteria” reported an association with the type of intestinal bacterial flora.  A puzzling observation is that even as the EPA air quality standards have achieved a 63-percent reduction in major air pollutants between 1980 and 2014, asthma rates have continued to rise in the U.S.  Between 1980 and 2010, asthma incidence in the population is reported to have gone from 3.1 percent to 8.4 percent.

The EPA computers have spoken, and theoretical “premature deaths” will be averted.  In the real world, energy prices will likely increase and impact the least advantaged the hardest as they struggle to pay for the air-conditioning and heating by which modern technology protects us from the reality of nature’s health impacts.


Charles G. Battig, M.S., M.D., Piedmont Chapter president, VA-Scientists and Engineers for Energy and Environment (VA-SEEE).  His website is www.climateis.com.

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toorightmate
October 5, 2015 4:44 am

Oh, I feel so free.
O3 as a matter of fact (Ofree).

Bruce Cobb
October 5, 2015 5:06 am

The EPA is doing an end-run around the constitution, and needs to be abolished. It is no longer about air quality. They have become a power-mad anti-business anti-fossil fuel, anti-democratic arm of Big Government, doing the bidding of Big Green.

Editor
October 5, 2015 5:08 am

If ozone is so dangerous why do people who live near the coast have the same life expectancy as the rest of us? One more reason for Al Gore to have a beach-side property,

david
October 5, 2015 5:10 am

Wheat causes asthma. I know several friends who have cured or really improved their asthma by not eating this poison grain.

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  david
October 5, 2015 5:42 am

That’s absurd on the face of it. It has been a significant part of man’s diet for thousands of years.

Tom in Florida
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
October 5, 2015 6:24 am

But is today’s wheat the same wheat of thousands of years ago?

indefatigablefrog
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
October 5, 2015 11:14 am

Milk has been consumed by adults for thousands of years, and yet lactose intolerance is still widespread globally among adults. So clearly thousands of years is not sufficient time to ensure complete evolutionary adaptation to foodstuffs.
Especially if the long-term symptoms do not actually prevent individuals for living into fertility and breeding.
If a disorder doesn’t actually kill people, then they can grow up and pass it on to their kids,
That doesn’t mean that the disorder is so negligible that they wouldn’t necessarily be better off simply avoiding consuming the food that causes it.
http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/news/070401_lactose

Steve P
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
October 6, 2015 8:06 am

Please see my post Steve P
October 5, 2015 at 12:40 pm
I’m not necessarily signing on to the idea that wheat causes asthma, but there is evidence that the change from hunter-gatherer diet/lifestyle to agriculture based diet/lifestyle about 10-12,000 years ago has resulted in smaller stature, smaller brains, and health issues such as degenerative joint disease (DJD), and tooth decay.

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  david
October 5, 2015 7:08 am

Nothing today is the same, including us. People are always looking for a food to blame, which is one reason we have all these fad diets, including the latest ones, “gluten-free”, “non-GMO”, and “organic”.

Reply to  david
October 5, 2015 8:52 am

You gonna phase out scotch whisky then?
I never saw anyone keel over with asthma after a few drams…

kiwistonewall
Reply to  david
October 5, 2015 11:26 pm

no, the issue is: what did they eat instead of wheat? Saturated fats are needed to build up the protective lung surfactant. I have solved my Asthma (it is so much better) – off wheat and on FAT. I suspect that wheat isn’t the problem so much as the “high carb low fat diet” pushed for so long – see my earlier post above.

Bob Dillon, M.D.
October 5, 2015 5:41 am

Charles:
Nice assessment of the trivial health effect of ozone and of the EPA’s unneeded and overbearing proposal.
Bob Dillon, M.D.

Marcus
October 5, 2015 5:48 am

I use a program called PeerBlock to see who is trying to access my computer and every time I come to WUWT I get warning messages about NASA and NOAA and sometimes Dept. of Defense..Just thought I’d let you know !!! Not sure what it means ???

H.R.
Reply to  Marcus
October 5, 2015 6:01 am

What it means is the NSA, CIA, and FBI haven’t gotten around to you yet, Marcus.

Marcus
Reply to  H.R.
October 5, 2015 6:13 am

It only happens on this site ????

JohnWho
Reply to  Marcus
October 5, 2015 6:27 am

Well, since WUWT is one of many WordPress users, maybe you should voice your concern to the WordPress folks?

Reply to  Marcus
October 5, 2015 7:19 am

Marcus, just installed PeerBlock myself, NOAA and NASA both tried 3 times to access my computer after I came out of WUWT and went back after the installation. I am in Spain but have a UK IP address to watch UK TV and listen to UK radio. This is worrying, Big Brother and all that!

Marcus
Reply to  andrewmharding
October 5, 2015 7:23 am

I was hoping Anthony had an explanation why it is only his site ( so far anyways) !!!!

Reply to  Marcus
October 5, 2015 7:28 am

It is probably something related to NOAA/NASA and other government content we display on WUWT. It might be nothing more than those servers which host that content trying to give your browser a cookie.
I’m not to worried about it at this point.

Reply to  andrewmharding
October 5, 2015 7:36 am

Also Critical Path.INC tried to access my computer, same IP address as NASA

Marcus
October 5, 2015 5:49 am

example NOAA 140.90.213.166

Marcus
Reply to  Marcus
October 5, 2015 5:59 am

Source = 198.2.69.246:60372

DadofTriplets
Reply to  Marcus
October 5, 2015 6:29 am

What is the target port because I would expect that what you have listed is your IP since it is DHCP assigned:
Pinging dhcp-198-2-69-246.cable.user.start.ca [198.2.69.246] with 32 bytes of da
ta:
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
I would expect NOAA comps to be behind a NAT firewall IP.

Reply to  Marcus
October 5, 2015 8:02 am

Allowed me to Ping their port, BUT 4 pings successful but they all took 0ms

The Original Mike M
Reply to  Marcus
October 5, 2015 12:00 pm

andrewmharding “Allowed me to Ping their port, BUT 4 pings successful but they all took 0ms”
Thus indicating that they even have veys to infect your ping app.

October 5, 2015 5:57 am

Most of the visible portion of smog are sub-micron sulfuric acid aerosols, Ozone is not visible but reacts with SO2 and water vapor to form sulfuric acid which EPA does not measure. The original ozone standard was based on a LA study of nine asthmatics whose attacks occured the day after ozone peaked. I think the sub-micron sulfuric acid (which can reach the lungs) caused the attacks. Visibility might be a better proxie than ozone and may correlate better with asthma attacks. Lowering the ozone standard does not seem to be working.

H.R.
October 5, 2015 5:58 am

If ozone pollution affects human lungs, wouldn’t it also affect all mammals’ lungs?
Then the EPA needs to explain to me why deer and raccoon populations are out of control in my neck of the woods and the black bear population is growing?

MarkW
October 5, 2015 6:05 am

When calculating pre-mature deaths, shouldn’t they be required to report exactly how “premature” those deaths are? Is it one day, or 10 years?

Bruce Cobb
October 5, 2015 6:24 am

It’s too bad they had to go and ban CFCs and non-prescription inhalants. The new, non-CFC inhalants are not only more expensive, but a prescription is required, and their effectiveness is considered to be lower. Just one more example of Big Government meddling, supposedly for the environment, but at the expense of people, and causing life-endangering situations.

October 5, 2015 6:24 am

There’s really only one way to avoid premature death: Don’t get born in the first place.

JohnWho
Reply to  Tom J
October 5, 2015 6:31 am

Yes!
Get born in the second place – much safer!
🙂

JohnWho
October 5, 2015 6:30 am

“New Ozone Regulations Will Save Lots of Imaginary People”
My imaginary friend is expressing pleasure that the EPA is concerned for him even though he does not pay taxes, vote, or is a citizen.
Oops, I just realized my imaginary friend is an Illegal Alien!

Tom in Florida
October 5, 2015 7:02 am

Has there ever been a double blind study on a person who died to determine if it is pre-mature or not?

H.R.
Reply to  Tom in Florida
October 5, 2015 8:31 am

It’s helpful if you can get the same person to die multiple times, Tom. It really narrows the error bars on the results of the premature death studies.
Lessee how that works…
Note the age of death of a study subject.
Revive the subject.
Expose the subject to a low level of the pollutant of interest.
Note the age of death of the study subject.
Revive the subject.
Expose the subject to a moderate level of the pollutant of interest.
Note the age of death of the study subject.
Revive the subject.
Expose the subject to a high level of the pollutant of interest.
Note the age of death of the study subject.
Revive the subject, pay them $50 and thank them for their participation in the study.
Time consuming, I know, but the robust results are worth the effort.

Tom in Florida
Reply to  H.R.
October 5, 2015 12:33 pm

Exactly

Marcus
October 5, 2015 7:42 am

to…
DadofTriplets
October 5, 2015 at 6:29 am
What is the target port because I would expect that what you have listed is your IP since it is DHCP assigned:
Pinging dhcp-198-2-69-246.cable.user.start.ca [198.2.69.246] with 32 bytes of data
I would expect NOAA comps to be behind a NAT firewall IP.
…… I was more interested in the example NOAA 140.90.213.166 ?????
…….When it hits , it changes the end number and tries again 8 times ??
…….Start.ca is my internet provider , so yes , the other number is my IP !!!
…….I think Anthony’s response is probably correct, I just find it odd that it is only here !!!

October 5, 2015 7:51 am

The bold step from 75 to 70 ppm ozone somehow reminds me of former Ukrainian pole vaulter Sergei Bubka. He set a new world record at every other appearance by besting the previous one by 1 cm, all the while staying well below his true limit. The EPA also seems to be giving itself a lot of scope for future adjustments – 65 ppm in 2025, 60 in 2035 … in this manner, they can keep busy for the next 150 years.

October 5, 2015 8:19 am

“As a physician, I am intrigued, if not put off, by the EPA concept of “premature deaths.” How am I to know that that unfortunate patient, who has just died, died prematurely? If asked, he would undoubtedly claim that he had died before his time, no matter the actual cause. All deaths are “premature” when viewed subjectively. The answer lies within the all-knowing, EPA-sponsored computers, as in “health assessment methodology” that claim the ability to define who died before their time.”
well Dr. Mengele you could do a controlled experiment. Or you just apply the best guesstimating approach you can in modelling.

Reply to  Steven Mosher
October 5, 2015 9:55 am

I guess dragging Dr. Mengele into this earns you the Godwin award.
Look at Crispin’s comment up-thread if you need help understanding exactly how much guesswork is involved here. Also note that a number of premature deaths per se is meaningless without also stating the amount of lifespan lost in each case.

October 5, 2015 9:07 am

Having been to what is widely regarded as the dirtiest winter city on earth I can vouch for the similarity with London of the 40s and 50s.
The handy thing about China, is they are so advanced you can always get a realtime read out, that way you can see which nasty is going for your throat.
http://aqicn.org/city/haerbin/
The joke is, most chinese wear medical face masks which we all know full well, don’t filter anything going in, but were designed to stop the medics coughing on patients in the op theatre.
If it makes people feel better, then the placebo effect still works better than anything else known to man.

Alcheson
October 5, 2015 9:37 am

The real solution to the problem with the EPA is that the EPA should be forced to submit any rule/regulation it intends to enforce to the Congress for a vote. Before the EPA can ever enforce a rule it must PASS house/senate approval. An executive agency should NEVER be allowed to write and enforce it’s own rules/laws period. Just imagine how life would be every police department in the US could write and enforce whatever laws it wanted with no oversight. With that in mind, ALL rules/regulations on the EPA books should be submitted one at a time to congress for a vote. All rules that do not pass immediately become null and void. Time for congress to take back its’ constitutionally given power.

Tad
October 5, 2015 9:47 am

I’m not sure that the author’s implication regarding Shanghai having horrible air pollution and yet a high average life span is correct because Shanghai has developed very rapidly. That is, how many years have the people living into their eighties breathed horribly-polluted air? Since Shanghai developed so quickly, perhaps 30 years ago it had relative clean air. Likewise, at least as I understand it, many people in Shanghai moved there from rural areas where they had been breathing clean(er) air.

RiHo08
October 5, 2015 9:52 am

As far as children’s asthma and second hand cigarette smoking:
http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/129/4/735.short
This review of 70+ papers suggests maternal prenatal and postnatal cigarette smoking demonstrates increase in childhood asthma.
As far a fine particles <2.5 microns, diesel mechanics have a higher burden of respiratory disease irrespective of cigarette smoking.
As far as ozone is concerned, in atmospheric chambers elite athletes were able to maximally exercise in ozone concentrations of 130 ppb.
The current standard of 75 ppb has no data on childhood asthma.

Steve P
October 5, 2015 12:40 pm

Charles Battig wrote:
“The Wall Street Journal October 1, 2015 article “Asthma Linked to Missing Bacteria” reported an association with the type of intestinal bacterial flora.”
indefatigablefrog
October 5, 2015 at 11:14 am
“Milk has been consumed by adults for thousands of years, and yet lactose intolerance is still widespread globally among adults. So clearly thousands of years is not sufficient time to ensure complete evolutionary adaptation to foodstuffs.”
Bruce Cobb
October 5, 2015 at 7:08 am
“People are always looking for a food to blame”
Yes Bruce, and also commonly looking for super foods containing this or that nutrient, oxidant, vitamin, enzyme, or probiotic. I think some of us make that effort because we recognize that our Western diet may be lacking in essential nutrients. Let me bring up a paragraph from the WSJ article cited by Dr. Battig:
The researchers discovered that low levels of the bacteria in newborns put them at an increased risk of getting asthma later in life. Infants usually acquire bacteria naturally and are protected. But the increased prevalence of certain events—the use of antibiotics by pregnant women, delivery by caesarean section, urban living and formula feeding—may make it harder for newborns to acquire the needed bacteria, scientists say.
There was a side discussion recently following a comment by Pamela G. about the hunter-gatherer diet, and cutting quickly to the chase, there is a theory among some anthropologists that the rise of agriculture caused H. sapiens to “domesticate itself,” if I understand adequately, which process witnessed the shrinkage of modern humans compared to their Cro Magnon forbears, a downsizing that is reflected in all domestic beasts when compared to their wild counterparts, including brain size. Cro Magnon are H. sapiens, but they were bigger and more heavily built than we are, and their brains were about 15% larger.
Questions about the “Idiocracy” aside, and looking just at diet and health, it turns out that Cro Magnon didn’t have DJD (arthritis), nor did they have tooth decay. I read recently of studies on preserved victims of a Pompei eruption who were found to have perfect teeth, a result, it was claimed, of their Mediterranean diet, which had no sugar.
The rise of agriculture and cities are hallmarks of the modern age, but changes in diet and lifestyle may have downsides such as osteoarthritis, bad teeth, asthma, and smaller brains to make it all work.

Svend Ferdinandsen
October 5, 2015 1:38 pm

Premature death is a very bad concept. Is it a lot of people who only loses a few days, or is it a single person losing 10 years? Now it is mixed with late deaths, so it is a hell of a mess with late dead people walking around all those early dead.

Tom in Florida
Reply to  Svend Ferdinandsen
October 5, 2015 2:16 pm

Most of the late dead roam around Florida where they masquerade as retirees.

Kevin R.
October 5, 2015 2:03 pm

If a claim of harm and purported evidence can’t prove or be admissible in a court of law that specific people have been harmed by specific means then it is bull.

October 6, 2015 3:15 am

So the EPA could have lowered the PPB to 60 and “saved” another 3,860 lives but chose not to? Heartless bastards!