Air quality guidelines do not adequately protect Australians

Publicly released:
Australia; NSW; VIC; QLD; WA; TAS

The way we set air quality thresholds in Australia is not adequately protecting community health, according to Aussie researchers. The current guidelines balances health risks with costs of the strategies, and the researchers say this puts regulators in a position where they must balance costs of expanding infrastructure against the benefits to human health. There is no incentive for reducing exposure to harmful pollutants, as long as the levels stay below the set thresholds. Since there is no current incentive for regulators and industry to continuously improve air quality, the Australian community is not being protected from the health impacts of air pollution, the authors say.

Media release

From: Medical Journal of Australia (MJA)

AIR QUALITY THRESHOLDS DO NOT ADEQUATELY PROTECT AUSTRALIANS

THE current mechanism for setting air quality thresholds in Australia does not adequately protect community health, according to the authors of a Perspective published by the Medical Journal of Australia.

Professor Graeme Zosky, Deputy Director of the Menzies Institute for Medical Research at the University of Tasmania, and colleagues wrote that the current guidelines for setting air quality standards “outline a method that balances risk assessment (health effects based on the exposure–response relationship) with the costs of abatement strategies to achieve the required targets”.

“This puts regulators in a position of balancing the costs of expanding infrastructure against the benefits to human health,” they wrote.

“The current approach to regulation of air pollution implies a causal model that is inconsistent with the available evidence.

“It provides no incentive for reducing exposure and allows increases in exposure to harmful pollutants, as long as the levels remain below the thresholds.

“This provides only partial health protection and adversely impacts community perceptions by implying that the current standards represent a ‘safe’ level of exposure.”

A case in point is particulate matter (PM).

“PM10 (PM ≤ 10μm in aerodynamic diameter) is small enough to bypass the upper airways and lodge in the conducting airways, but is usually too large to reach the alveoli,” wrote Zosky and colleagues.

“Acute exposure to PM10 is associated with hospitalisations and mortality for cardiorespiratory conditions, while long term exposure is linked to chronic cardiorespiratory conditions and metabolic disorders.

“No safe threshold for PM10 exposure has been identified.

“PM2.5 (PM ≤ 2.5μm in aerodynamic diameter) can penetrate deeper into the lungs and is one of the leading causes of global mortality and morbidity.

“PM2.5 has been linked to cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease, pre-term birth, metabolic disorders and neurological health problems.

“Like PM10, there is no evidence for a safe threshold for PM2.5 exposure,” Zosky and colleagues wrote.

Despite this, the ambient air quality National Environmental Protection Measure sets reportable limits for key criteria air pollutants, which include PM, nitrogen dioxide, carbon monoxide, ozone, sulfur dioxide and lead.

“Collectively, there is sufficient evidence to conclude that there is no safe threshold for exposure to PM10, PM2.5 or lead,” Zosky and colleagues wrote.

“For nitrogen dioxide, there is a threshold, but the current NEPM standard is well above this level.

“On this basis, the current standards are not sufficient to adequately protect the health of the Australian community.”

Zosky and colleagues said they were reassured by the most recent impact statement prepared for the National Environment Protection Council for the revision of the standards for gaseous pollutants, which recommends changing the NEPM to make reference to minimising the health effects of exposures and “incorporation of exposure–reduction targets”.

“We endorse this approach,” they wrote.

“However, the recommended measures for gaseous pollutants still seem to rely on specifying a standard in the future, albeit a lower one, rather than proposing goals for continual reduction.

“In the absence of a mechanism to promote continual improvement and best practice by regulators and industry, we are failing to adequately protect the Australian community from the health impacts of air pollution,” they concluded.

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The Medical Journal of Australia is a publication of the Australian Medical Association.

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Research Medical Journal of Australia (MJA), Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends.
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Organisation/s: Menzies Institute for Medical Research, University of Tasmania, The University of Western Australia, Monash University, The University of New South Wales, University of Sydney
Funder: This work was submitted on behalf of the Centre for Air Pollution, Energy and Health Research, a Centre of Research Excellence funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. The funding source had no role in the study.
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