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Air Quality Improved During Bush Administration

A recent report from a Washington think tank shows that levels of numerous gases linked with air pollution, like carbon monoxide, have fallen off since 2001 and air quality in the U.S. has improved significantly over the last decade.

By James Osborne

May 20, 2009

As the Obama administration considers further steps to fight air pollution, a recent report from a Washington think tank shows that air quality in the United States has improved significantly over the last decade.

The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research analyzed data collected by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and concluded that levels of numerous gases linked with air pollution have fallen off since 2001.

Among the findings: Carbon monoxide decreased by 39 percent, ozone by 6 percent, and sulfur dioxide by 32 percent.

"Pick any category you want and pollution levels are generally lower than they were seven years ago," said Steven Hayward, the policy analyst who authored the report, titled "Index of Leading Environmental Indicators," for the conservative think tank.

"(Environmental groups) said air pollution was out of control, but this was always more about politics than it was fact," Hayward said.

Environmental groups agree that tremendous progress has been made since the 1980s, when cities like Houston and Los Angeles were thick with smog and acid rain devastated lakes and forests across the U.S.

But they add that the progress reflects "strong legislation," and they say the nation needs more of it.

"The reason we've had success over the last 40 years is because strong laws like the Clean Air Act work on pollution," said John Walke, an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council.

"But we have a long way to go. We've learned more. The science is better today than it was in 1980 or 1990. We now know we need stronger definitions of clean air to truly protect Americans.

"Over 150 million Americans live in areas with unhealthy air," Walke said. "If we can pass effective laws, we can reduce the problem."

In an e-mailed statement, the EPA said that it has seen success by a number of measures, but there are still key areas of the country "not meeting EPA's air quality standards."

President George W. Bush drew the ire of environmental groups throughout his eight years in the White House, perhaps the loudest in 2003 when he announced that he would end a Clean Air Act program that required older power plants, refineries and industrial sites to install pollution control devices when they expanded their operations.

But in looking over the data on air quality from the Bush years, Hayward notes that levels of most air pollutants decreased at a faster rate than they did during the Clinton administration.

"Mostly of it's technological change. Quite a bit of it's been forced by regulation, but a lot of it has been the marketplace," Hayward said. "The EPA has models that project an 80 percent decline in auto emissions. Nothing Bush could have done was going to change that."

Responding to Hayward's report, the EPA said it did not correlate drops in pollution levels to specific presidential decisions.

"Air quality regulations and progress overlap administrations," the agency said in a statement. "For example, ozone reductions that began in the East in 2004 resulted from a rule the agency issued in 1998."

Jeff Holmsted, a high-ranking official at the EPA from 2001-2005 and now an attorney with the law firm Bracewell & Giuliani, acknowledged that the decrease in air pollution over the last eight years owes much to efforts of past administrations. But he called the statistics a vindication of Bush's environmental policy, which he said did away with cumbersome regulations while still protecting the environment.

"I think among people who actually understand how the regulatory process works, they, in private, would acknowledge that we accomplished a lot," Holmsted said.

Hayward began putting out his annual report in 1994 due to what he called "the lack of unity on environmental responsibility in this country."

Every year he combs through EPA data to present what he believes is a more comprehensive portrait of the state of the environment than what the mainstream media have provided following events like the grounding of the Exxon Valdez oil tanker in 1989.

"Species extinction or nutrient run off from the Mississippi basin, these are big issues that get very little coverage," Hayward said. "It isn't a big catastrophe like a tanker crashing or a hurricane."

Hayward says his biggest gripe is the amount of media coverage given over to global warming.

He acknowledges that carbon dioxide levels are increasing in the earth's atmosphere, but he says there are gaps in global warming data, such as a recent trend toward cooler temperatures.

"We had temperature increases for two-and-a-half decades, but it suddenly seemed to switch a few years ago," Hayward said. "It might just be noise, but a lot longer and we'll have to think about it."

That might rub against the grain of environmentalists like Walke, who say the science behind global warming has improved dramatically over the last five years.

But for Hayward, the number of people that believe something is no indication that it's correct.

"If you look at survey data, what you find is three quarters of Americans think environmental quality is getting worse, but at the same time they tend to think their neighborhoods are getting better," he said. "People just don't have all the information."

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22 comments on this item

I hear the word think tank and I immediately think of PNAC, so I'm skeptical right away. As if the title didn't scream bull****, it took all of two seconds to find information to discredit the source of the report.

"In February 2007, The Guardian (UK) reported that AEI was offering scientists and economists $10,000 each, "to undermine a major climate change report" from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). AEI asked for "articles that emphasize the shortcomings" of the IPCC report, which "is widely regarded as the most comprehensive review yet of climate change science." AEI visiting scholar Kenneth Green made the $10,000 offer "to scientists in Britain, the US and elsewhere," in a letter describing the IPCC as "resistant to reasonable criticism and dissent." The Guardian reported further that AEI "has received more than $1.6m from ExxonMobil, and more than 20 of its staff have worked as consultants to the Bush administration. Lee Raymond, a former head of ExxonMobil, is the vice-chairman of AEI's board of trustees," added The Guardian.

AIP - I think the problem is the way you are doing your searches for information in your quest to debunk global warming. I'm not exactly sure why you refuse to believe that our environment is in danger, but the world is changing towards alternatives and more conservation and better sustainable living, and you are being left behind. Adapt, lose the denial that the world is changing towards this goal, and you know, it's a good goal, it should have been the objective all along, but some are a little stubborn and want to cling to the old ways. What for?

The link to the quote in my comment - http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2007/feb/02/frontpagenews.climatechange

So I guess the implication is that we can thank George Bush for the air that we breathe......

Kitty is right, I think your ''think tank'' is nothing more than a septic tank. The Bushy administration did nothing for air quality, they made it worse. All the hot air and pollution that came out of the mouths of George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Sean Hannity, Ann Coulter and the rest of the republicans caused pollution and massive global warming.

It's not cold in Alaska, or storming.

As hot weather patterns are forming.

The permafrost's melting

And Russia's sun-belting

while AIP denies Global Warming.

momof11: Yes.

Glenn: Prove it.

kittyv: There's nothing wrong with conservation. I live a VERY earth friendly life, believe me. It doesn't change the fact that there is a massive global "warming" scam that can trap the well intentioned but gullible people, in need a crisis for some reason. Most of my liberal friends (and I have many) have no intention of conserving or being anywhere near as earth friendly as we are. We do it all. Don’t even use a clothes dryer unless it’s raining. We have a very economical car, watch our electricity usage, grow organic fruits and vegetables, recycle and on & on. We walk the walk. Most people won’t. I bet most posting here DO all of that too but overall, Americans aren’t very good at doing anything but whining about it.

What does your think tank say about the air quality in Baghdad, Gaza, Southern Lebanon & Kabul over the last 8 yrs?

It stinks there! sheesh!!

AIP: You certainly raised up a crowd of nay-sayers with this one. Very inconvenient. :)

Me? I think that the world is going to end and that the only solution is to sign a treaty that limits the GNP of the United States, transfers our wealth to other nations, and allows China and India to do whatever they want.

Perfect! Brilliant OP! These guy's here will LOVE it!

I'll be giving away all of MY money at Savemart tomorrow at 8am.

AIP - Your name says it all. You are a fake. You write crap like this just to stir up argument and controversy. If you don't think this planet needs TLC and fast, then you must be a full blown ostrich or have a substance abuse problem. If you don't think we are polluting the Earth, then why on it would you practice all this green-friendly lifestyle? Again - you are a fake...

No need to keep beating up on the other view points...we are heading in the right direction and I commend AIP for his lifestyle..we could all learn a thing or two from him. If we improved the air quality and slowed pollution just a little... under Bush.... we should all jump for joy. Change takes time and cost trillions to implement as we all know. There is some concern still out there on this whole global warming debate...which is a science still being learned. We have learned a great deal in a very short time and we will learn even more in the near future.

There has been little talk about the potential of a mini ice age on the way....many feel no big deal and will not happen...but if it does and Al was wrong....millions will die from lack of protection and the energy to keep themselves warm...and from starvation... as crops disappear world wide. In this case a little global warming is highly recommended...

http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/090505-sun-quiet.html

http://www.newsmax.com/headlines/global_warming_ice_age/2008/04/24/90591.html

Best to stay the pollution free course with new technology.... and hope for the best...

Observer: Whoa...calm down girl! AIP is certainly trying to get you riled up, but no need to double down! :)

We are all polluting, all the time. Its natural.

The question is not IF we pollute, its how much we pollute and where the line exists for "excessive".

When you breathe, you emit CO2. Technically, a pollutant according to Al Gore. Lets not discuss other bodily wastes other than to say that one human being cannot grow enough vegetables with the waste they generate to result in zero emissions.

Hopefully, this will solve some of our problems.

http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/60-second-science/post.cfm?id=carbon-capture-success-in-wisconsin-2009-05-20

bellyflop...nice one!

momof11 - you state it well when you speak of the pollution we have caused overseas...looks like we have more to do in Pakistan and Afghanistan. God we are such hypocrites!

The US military is the biggest polluter in the whole world, of course, they will be exempted from any "regulation" that will be forced onto the rest of us. Their contractors will probably be eligible for "waivers" or "deferrals". Then we will see lots of propaganda about the "voluntary greening" of the armed forces! We will all be so very proud.

momof11 - I have heard some pretty bad stories about military pollution. It is true. We need to clean up our own backyard first or we will be nothing but hypocrites...

Observer: You aren’t exactly one of the bright ones here, are you? ;-)

AIP anyone who thinks that we should thank George Bush for the air that we breathe should not pass judgment on anybody's intelligence.

The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research website appearance doesn't really instill much confidence as a unbiased scientific source for information. http://www.aei.org/

Some of the quoted facts make perfect sense. Certain types of air pollution like smog were on the decline for decades before the Bush years and it would be doubtful that administrative changes could reverse that trend.) Most of those trends were in using coal and automotive transportation. Another trend that also started before the Bush administration and through inertia already in place would help reduce air pollution here in the United States. It was the exportation of American manufacturing to foreign countries. So while the US is controlling its air quality China is bringing on a new coal fired power plant each month without those controls. The smoke from those power plants end up in the jet stream and I am sure are producing acid rain somewhere else. We have some history to base that on the Ohio Valley used create acid rain for Northeastern Canada England used to do the same in the forests in Germany. Also from 2001 to 2003 the EPA was run by Christine Todd Whitman a moderate Republican that had a bit more environmental concern than her boss did. So it is logical to assume that pollution in the USA during the time period air pollution did go down however it is doubtful that George W. Bush had much to do with it.

.

The whole carbon thing is still too big for me to really wrap my head around. I think we still have a lot to learn there until I do I will keep my opinions to myself there. One thing I know for sure, if carbon is as dangerous as they say it is nothing we do here will help while we buy things from countries like China.

Hey Inconvienentpost, stop hitting the refresh button on your browser. You have no keywords to draw anyone to your post. You're clicking the refresh button yourself. It's a rather pathetic way to try and get others to think that people actually agree with you.

Mr. Bricker's post is honest. He has a keyword that matches the name of a newspaper... hence the newspapers followers all reported here. Folks from Canada nor anywhere have posted comments on your post because yours it totally bogus.

You're a pathetic idiot. The majority of bloggers laugh at you when we all get together. You can stop hitting the refresh button... it's just making you look sad.

P.S. Don't lie to me and tell me otherwise... please.

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