Toxics Releases Maps and Spreadsheets
Toxic
Releases and Health: A Review of Pollution Data and Current Knowledge on the
Health Effects of Toxic Chemicals
January 22, 2003
U.S. PIRG Education Fund
Executive
Summary | News
Release
Download the full report.
(597 KB, PDF)
| Maps of releases linked
to cancer by state, 2000: |
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Maps of dioxins releases
by state, 2000:
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| Maps of
releases linked to neurological effects by state, 2000: |
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| Maps of releases linked
to reproductive effects by state, 2000: |
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| Maps of releases linked
to respiratory effects by state, 2000: |
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| Maps of Releases linked
to developmental effects by state, 2000: |
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State Appendices
These files are Excel spreadsheets. Most are over .5 MB,
so be patient while waiting for the file to load. |
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Executive
Summary
Each year, industrial facilities
nationwide release hundreds of millions of pounds of chemicals linked to cancer,
to developmental and reproductive problems, and to neurological and respiratory
disorders into the nation's air and water. Yet, communities in the shadow of
industrial facilities typically have access to only limited information on how
these discharges may be affecting their health.
A review of data reported
to the EPA's Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) demonstrates the degree to which
toxic substances with links to serious health problems are released into our
communities and highlights which industry sectors and companies are responsible
for the bulk of toxic pollution. More importantly, these data demonstrate the
need for more and better information about chemical toxicity, the release of
toxics into the environment, and the links between toxic chemicals and the development
of chronic disease.
Toxic chemicals linked
to severe health problems continue to be released in massive quantities nationwide.
• In 2000, more than 100
million pounds of cancer-causing chemicals were released to the nation's
air and water, with dichloromethane—an industrial solvent that is also used
in the manufacture of photographic film—the most frequently released carcinogen
nationwide.
• More than 138 million
pounds of chemicals linked to developmental problems such as birth defects
and learning disabilities, and 50 million pounds of chemicals related to reproductive
disorders were released to air and water in 2000. Toluene (a developmental
toxicant) and carbon disulfide (a developmental and reproductive toxicant) were
released in the greatest quantities.
• More than one billion
pounds of suspected neurological toxicants were released to air and water
in 2000. Methanol—a solvent and product of wood pulping—was the most commonly
released chemical with suspected links to neurological disorders.
• In 2000, more than 1.7
billion pounds of suspected respiratory toxicants were released to the
nation's air, with acid aerosols of hydrochloric acid the most commonly released
toxic substance.
• More than 7,000 grams
of dioxins—regarded as among the most toxic substances known to science—were
released to air and water in 2000.
• Significant releases were
also reported of several persistent, highly toxic substances, such as
lead (275,000 pounds), lead compounds (1.3 million pounds), mercury (30,000
pounds) and mercury compounds (136,000 pounds).
High-volume toxic chemical
releases appear to be concentrated among a small number of communities.
• Approximately three-quarters
(76 percent) of all air and water releases of reproductive toxicants in 2000
occurred within just 10 U.S. zip codes. Similarly, nearly two-thirds (65 percent)
of all dioxin releases and one-third (32 percent) of all developmental toxicant
releases occurred within just 10 zip codes.
• Many communities have
been subjected to high-volume toxic releases year after year. Since the start
of TRI reporting in 1987,10 zip codes have received more than two-thirds (68
percent) of all reported air and water releases of reproductive toxicants and
more than one-quarter (26 percent) of all developmental toxicant releases.
The "Sunbelt"
has supplanted the "Rust Belt" as the nation's leading source of toxic
chemical releases with known or suspected links to serious health problems.
• Thirteen southern states,
stretching from North Carolina to New Mexico, were responsible for 48 percent
of all carcinogen releases reported by original TRI industries nationwide in
2000, up from just 33 percent in 1987. By contrast, the 19 states of the industrial
Northeast and Midwest saw their proportion of carcinogen releases decline from
approximately 52 percent of the national total in 1987 to 41 percent in 2000.
• The southern states were
also responsible for more than three-quarters (78 percent) of all reported air
and water releases of reproductive toxicants in 2000, as well as 67 percent
of all dioxin releases, 59 percent of all developmental toxicant releases, and
50 percent of all suspected neurotoxicant releases. In each category except
dioxin releases (for which reporting began in 2000), the South's proportion
of toxic chemical releases has increased significantly since 1987.
• Individual Sunbelt states
are also among the leading releasers of toxic chemicals. Texas experienced greater
releases of carcinogens, neurological toxicants and dioxins than any other state
and ranked in the top five for releases of developmental and reproductive toxicants.
Tennessee ranked first for releases of developmental and reproductive toxicants
and in the top five for releases of carcinogens and suspected neurological toxicants.
Communities subjected
to high-volume toxic releases have access to only limited information about
how those releases might affect their health.
• Many states—especially
those with high levels of toxic releases—fail to adequately track cases of cancer,
birth defects, asthma and other chronic diseases. Only three states— California,
Iowa and Massachusetts—possess cancer and birth defects registries that meet
the highest standards for quality as well as any system at all for the tracking
of asthma cases. As a result, researchers, health officials, and the public
can't adequately determine whether disease rates show patterns reflecting the
release of high quantities of chemicals linked to those diseases.
• Scientific information
on the health effects of many toxic chemicals is limited or nonexistent. A 1998
EPA review found that only seven percent of the nearly 3,000 chemicals made
or imported to the U.S. in large quantities possessed a complete set of publicly
available screening data on their toxicity. Even for those chemicals that have
been studied, little information exists on how those substances can influence
human health at environmental levels of exposure.
• Government surveys that
measure human exposure to toxic chemicals cover only about six percent of the
potentially dangerous chemicals on the market today. The information that does
exist on human exposure is limited and generally of little use in determining
the degree to which residents of a particular area have been exposed to toxicants.
• The Toxics Release Inventory
only covers releases of less than one percent of the estimated 80,000 chemicals
in commerce today. Further, TRI covers only releases from the largest facilities
in a limited number of industries. As a result, releases of potentially health-threatening
releases of toxic chemicals are greater than are reported to TRI.
Creation of a Nationwide
Health Tracking Network would enable citizens, scientists and public health
officials to better assess and respond to the threats posed by toxic releases.
An effective health tracking network would include:
• Expanded monitoring of
human exposure to toxic chemicals, so that public health officials have a clearer
understanding of the levels of toxicants to which Americans are exposed.
• Enhanced tracking of chronic
diseases—such as asthma, cancer, birth defects and Alzheimer's—in order to help
evaluate the potential links between these diseases and toxic exposures.
• An early warning system
to alert communities to immediate health crises such as heavy metal and pesticide
poisonings.
• Rapid response teams to
quickly evaluate disease clusters and other health threats thought to be linked
to specific toxic exposures.
Other steps—such as expanded
reporting of toxic releases, increased emphasis on reducing the use of toxics,
and better information on the health effects of chemicals on the market—could
also help protect communities from the potential health impacts of toxic releases.