A new report from the Union of Concerned Scientists reveals that communities with a high concentration of low-income and minority residents are disproportionately affected by the release of ethylene oxide, a colorless and carcinogenic gas that is produced by medical equipment sterilization facilities.
This gas poses a threat to over 14 million Americans, yet many people may not be aware that they live near these facilities because they often appear as ordinary buildings.
The report’s author, Darya Minovi, a senior researcher with the group, states that these commercial sterilizers are not easily recognizable as industrial facilities.
“That’s particularly the case with commercial sterilizers. It might not necessarily be the case with some of the larger chemical manufacturing facilities that emit ethylene oxide and also a number of other substances, but commercial sterilizers often just look like large warehouses,” she told The Hill in an interview. “They don’t have very large stacks, it’s not clear what’s going on inside the facility, and ethylene oxide is of course, a colorless gas, so you might not even be aware that it’s being emitted.”
Compounding the issue, she noted, many of the emissions are so-called fugitive emissions, those produced unintentionally through leaking valves or equipment.
Of 104 facilities analyzed by the group, about 14.2 million people live within five miles of one, and there are 10,000 schools and child care facilities within the same radius. Those near child care facilities, Minovi noted, pose a particular hazard because ethylene oxide “is a mutagen, meaning that breathing it can damage your cells’ DNA, and kids’ cells are dividing more rapidly than adults’ do,” she said.
The report identified a total of 12 communities as sterilizer hot spots, or those where residents are exposed to at least two commercial sterilizers within 10 miles. On average, residents who are people of color, low-income and do not speak English as their first language had higher exposure within five miles than the U.S. average.
Minovi also pointed to what she called particularly egregious conditions in Puerto Rico, which has seven total commercial sterilizers within five miles of a total of 413,000 people, more than one-tenth of the island’s population. The only U.S. states with more commercial sterilizers are California and Texas, which are the nation’s two most populous states, compared to Puerto Rico’s population of just over 3 million.
A forthcoming Environmental Protection Agency rule, expected this month, is projected to reduce the allowable emissions from commercial sterilizers. However, Minovi noted, this will regulate only part of the problem.
“This is just one class of facilities that emit ethylene oxide,” she said. “There are six or seven other types of facilities that emit ethylene oxide that still need updated standards,” such as hospital sterilizers and miscellaneous organic chemical manufacturing plants.
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WHY NOT JUST TELL US WHERE THESE PLACES ARE AT INSTEAD OF STATING WE WOULD NEVER RECOGNIZE THEM, OR SMELL THE POISON…SEEMS THAT THESE STORIES ARE MEANT TO PUT PEOPLE IN A PANIC…..
They are false trash if it was all true we would know where they are if there is no smell as they state it’s bull crap