N
|
ew carbon emissions
standards that were proposed last year for coal-fired power plants in the
United States would substantially improve human health and prevent more than
3,000 premature deaths per year, according to a new study.
The study, led by researchers at Syracuse and Harvard Universities, used modeling to predict the effect on human health of changes to
national carbon standards for power plants. The researchers calculated three
different outcomes using data from the Census Bureau and detailed maps of the
more than 2,400 fossil-fuel power plants across the country.
The model with the biggest health benefit was the one that
most closely resembled the changes that the Environmental Protection Agency
proposed in a rule in June.
Read The New York
Times story here: “E.P.A. Carbon Emissions Plan Could Save Thousands of Lives, Study Finds”.
No comments:
Post a Comment