Obama to Introduce Sweeping New Controls on Ozone Emissions
The New York Times 25/11/14
SCIENTIFIC SHIELD: Environment
SUMMARY:
The Obama administration is expected to release on Wednesday a contentious and long-delayed environmental regulation to curb emissions of ozone.
The regulation would aim at smog from power plants and factories across the country, particularly in the Midwest.
Public health groups have lobbied the government for years to rein in ozone emissions and said the regulation was one of the most important health decisions Mr. Obama could make in his second term.
But industry groups say that the regulation would impose unwieldy burdens on the economy, with little public health benefit.
CRITICAL APPRAISAL:
Is good to seeing the Obama's government worrying about the environment. It means that thing are changing, that we are building a new world without pollution. Even though it have taken too much time beginning this ozone regulation.
The measures are taken will be a good example that what the other countries have to do, pollute less.
GLOSSARY:
Ozone: Is an inorganic molecule with the chemical formula OO2. Is a powerful oxidant (far more so than dioxygen) and has many industrial and consumer applications related to oxidation. This same high oxidizing potential, however, causes ozone to damage mucous and respiratory tissues in animals, and also tissues in plants, above concentrations of about 100 ppb. This makes ozone a potent respiratory hazard and pollutant near ground level.
Smog: Smog is a type of air pollutant. Modern smog, as found for example in Los Angeles, is a type of air pollution derived from vehicular emission from internal combustion engines and industrial fumes that react in the atmosphere with sunlight to form secondary pollutants that also combine with the primary emissions to form photochemical smog.
Power plants: power station (also referred to as a generating station, power plant, powerhouse or generating plant) is an industrial facility for the generation of electric power.At the center of nearly all power stations is a generator, a rotating machine that converts mechanical power into electrical power by creating relative motion between a magnetic field and a conductor.