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Pollution

Pollution refers to harmful environmental contaminants and to the act or process of polluting the environment. Generally such a process needs to result from human activity to be regarded as pollution. Relatively benign substances that natural processes convert to pollutants, such as sunlight's conversion of nitrogen oxides and ozone to smog, are typically regarded as pollutants or pollution themselves.

Whether something is pollution can depend on context. Blooms of algae and the resultant eutrophication of lakes and coastal ocean is considered pollution when it is fueled by nutrients from industrial, agricultural, or residential runoff.

Although carbon dioxide is not toxic—and actually stimulates plant growth—because it is a greenhouse gas that fosters global warming, carbon dioxide is sometimes referred to as pollution, in particular that produced by the combustion of fuels for human use. More often and more properly carbon dioxide from such sources are labelled neutrally as "emissions."

Traditional forms of pollution include air pollution, water pollution, while a broader interpretation of the word has led to the ideas of ship pollution, light pollution and noise pollution.

Serious pollution sources include chemical plants, oil refineries, nuclear waste dumps, regular garbage dumps (many toxic substances are illegally dumped there), incinerators, PVC factories, corporate animal farms creating huge amounts of animal waste. Some of the more common contaminants are: lead (like in lead paint), chromium, zinc, arsenic, benzene.

Pollutants are thought to play a part in a variety of maladies, including: cancer, lupus, immune diseases, allergies, asthma.

Regulation and Monitoring

The United States Environmental Protection Agency was supposed to establish "acceptable" levels of exposure to contaminants. One of the ratings chemicals are given are carcinogenicity, or how likely they are to cause cancer. Levels range from, not carcinogenic, likely carcinogen, known carcinogen, and unknown. But scientists are finding out that most of these levels are far too high and people should be exposed less to them. The CalEPA Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment has a list of more reasonable levels. (OEHHA)

The US has many departments responsible for tracking various pollutants.

  1. Toxic Release Inventory - tracks how much waste companies release into the water and air. Gives permits for releasing specific quantities of these pollutants each year.
  2. Superfund - manages Superfund sites and the pollutants in them (CERCLA).
  3. OSHA limits for air contaminants
  4. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry - found out top 20 pollutants, alias for chemicals, how they affect people, what industries use them and what products they are found in.
  5. National Toxicology Program - from National Institutes of Health. Reports and studies on how pollutants affect people.
  6. Toxnet - more databases and reports on toxicology. From NIH

Additional Resources

  1. Scorecard.org - lots of info about pollution in your area, just enter your zip code. Colored maps also show how bad certain types of pollution are in your area.
  2. Environmental Protection Agency
  3. OEHHA
  4. National Toxic Mold Coalition and Foundation
  5. Environmental Defense Fund
  6. Rachel's Environment and Health News - Weekly news about how the polluted environment affects people, and what corporations and governments are doing (or not doing) about it. Also in Spanish.
  7. Essential.org - Some organizations related to consumers and consumer protection, including pollution.
  8. CleanUp GE.org - Info about GE's shady dumping practices on the Hudson river.
  9. Extoxnet newsletters - environmental pollution news. Last update 1998.
  10. Environmental News Network - more news
  11. Environmental Working Group
  12. Sewage Sludge - in the U.S. it is perfectly legal to fertilize food crops with solids from the sewer, which include lots of heavy metals and toxins.
  13. Yahoo - Toxicology - another great starting point.
  14. The ToxTutor from the National Library of Medicine - An excellent resource to review human toxicology.

See also: petroleum, renewable energy, toxicology




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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pollution".