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Ethanol Vehicles Pose A Significant Risk To Human Health, Study Finds

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Ethanol is widely touted as an eco-friendly, clean-burning fuel. But if every vehicle in the United States ran on fuel made primarily from ethanol instead of pure gasoline, the number of respiratory-related deaths and hospitalizations would likely increase, according to a new study by Stanford University atmospheric scientist Mark Z. Jacobson. His findings are published in the April 18 online edition of the journal Environmental Science & Technology (ES&T).

”Ethanol is being promoted as a clean and renewable fuel that will reduce global warming and air pollution,” said Jacobson, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering.”But our results show that a high blend of ethanol poses an equal or greater risk to public health than gasoline, which already causes significant health damage.”

Gasoline vs. ethanol
For the study, Jacobson used a sophisticated computer model to simulate air quality in the year 2020, when ethanol-fueled vehicles are expected to be widely available in the United States.

”The chemicals that come out of a tailpipe are affected by a variety of factors, including chemical reactions, temperatures, sunlight, clouds, wind and precipitation,” he explained.”In addition, overall health effects depend on exposure to these airborne chemicals, which varies from region to region. Ours is the first ethanol study that takes into account population distribution and the complex environmental interactions.”

In the experiment, Jacobson ran a series of computer tests simulating atmospheric conditions throughout the United States in 2020, with a special focus on Los Angeles.”Since Los Angeles has historically been the most polluted airshed in the U.S., the testbed for nearly all U.S. air pollution regulation and home to about 6 percent of the U.S. population, it is also ideal for a more detailed study,” he wrote.

Jacobson programmed the computer to run air quality simulations comparing two future scenarios:

  • A vehicle fleet (that is, all cars, trucks, motorcycles, etc., in the United States) fueled by gasoline, versus
  • A fleet powered by E85, a popular blend of 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline.

Deaths and hospitalizations
The results of the computer simulations were striking.

”We found that E85 vehicles reduce atmospheric levels of two carcinogens, benzene and butadiene, but increase two others-formaldehyde and acetaldehyde,” Jacobson said.”As a result, cancer rates for E85 are likely to be similar to those for gasoline. However, in some parts of the country, E85 significantly increased ozone, a prime ingredient of smog.”

Inhaling ozone-even at low levels-can decrease lung capacity, inflame lung tissue, worsen asthma and impair the body’s immune system, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. The World Health Organization estimates that 800,000 people die each year from ozone and other chemicals in smog.

”In our study, E85 increased ozone-related mortalities in the United States by about 200 deaths per year compared to gasoline, with about 120 of those deaths occurring in Los Angeles,” Jacobson said.”These mortality rates represent an increase of about 4 percent in the U.S. and 9 percent in Los Angeles above the projected ozone-related death rates for gasoline-fueled vehicles in 2020.”

The study showed that ozone increases in Los Angeles and the northeastern United States will be partially offset by decreases in the southeast.”However, we found that nationwide, E85 is likely to increase the annual number of asthma-related emergency room visits by 770 and the number of respiratory-related hospitalizations by 990,” Jacobson said.”Los Angeles can expect 650 more hospitalizations in 2020, along with 1,200 additional asthma-related emergency visits.”

The deleterious health effects of E85 will be the same, whether the ethanol is made from corn, switchgrass or other plant products, Jacobson noted.”Today, there is a lot of investment in ethanol,” he said.”But we found that using E85 will cause at least as much health damage as gasoline, which already causes about 10,000 U.S. premature deaths annually from ozone and particulate matter. The question is, if we’re not getting any health benefits, then why continue to promote ethanol and other biofuels?

”There are alternatives, such as battery-electric, plug-in-hybrid and hydrogen-fuel cell vehicles, whose energy can be derived from wind or solar power,” he added.”These vehicles produce virtually no toxic emissions or greenhouse gases and cause very little disruption to the land-unlike ethanol made from corn or switchgrass, which will require millions of acres of farmland to mass-produce. It would seem prudent, therefore, to address climate, health and energy with technologies that have known benefits.”

[tags]E85, ethanol, alternative fuel, global warming, air pollution[/tags]

2 Comments

This seems to miss the point of ethanol, which in the end is to run at what would effectively be known as E100, or pure ethanol. It is well known by drag racers that ethanol burns at a lower temp than gasoline, so all the nasty things like oxides of nitrogen are much lower. At the same time, formaldehyde and acetaldehyde are not byproducts of pure ethanol burning reactions.

Your story poses the question: Why continue to promote ethanol? Because it has the following advantages to the current product being used, gasoline:

1) It recycles its carbon dioxide and water emissions via the corn or sugar’s carbon dioxide and water consumption
2) It is cost-competitive at current and recent gasoline prices
3) It is produced domestically, improving the United States’ trade balance and employment
4) A large portion of the current product, gasoline, comes from countries that are not supportive of democracy and capitalism, two systems Americans feel make sense for the future of mankind

When and if battery-electric, plug-in hybrid, hydrogen-fuel cell or other alternative vehicles can become cost-competitive and widely disseminated, they may displace both gasoline and biofuel. If they truly are a comparable product (mileage, speed, distance) and can be cost competitive with a subsidy similar in dollar amount to the current ethanol subsidy, then you should publish research proving that.

In the mean time, why not support a solution that works today?

I think an interesting follow-up study to properly analyze the “health risks” to humans would be to offset these risks against potential benefits (e.g. from less carbon dioxide entering the atmosphere from hydrocarbons currently trapped in the earth’s crust, environmental impacts from oil spills, less dollars going to entities that likely fund terrorism from oil proceeds, etc)

What Do You Think?

 
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