Trump's EPA Refuses to Reduce Pollutants Linked to Coronavirus Deaths
Salon
By: Lisa Song, Lylla Younes
In April, as coronavirus cases multiplied across the country, the head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency rejected scientists' advice to tighten air pollution standards for particulate matter, or soot.
In the next few weeks, EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler likely will reaffirm that decision with a final ruling, despite emerging evidence that links particulate pollution to COVID-19 deaths.
There was enough evidence to support a stricter standard before the pandemic, said Christopher Frey, an environmental engineering professor at North Carolina State University who studies air pollution. The added threat from the coronavirus is like "icing on the cake," he said, and should compel Wheeler to adopt an even more stringent limit.
Particulate matter kills people. "It is responsible for more deaths and sickness than any other air pollutant in the world," said Gretchen Goldman, a research director at the Union of Concerned Scientists.