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Media
For Immediate Release:
New Harvard Medical School Report: Oil-focused Energy
Policy Takes Toll on Human Health
Boston, MA - Amid highly charged energy policies being debated
in Congress, a new report published today by the Center for Health
and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School captures the
full spectrum of human health and environmental damages associated
with our dependence on oil. "Oil: A Life cycle Analysis of
Its Health and Environmental Impacts," is the first report
to catalog the dangers to people and ecosystems from exploration,
drilling, extraction, transport, refining and combustion. Among
these dangers are elevated rates of fatalities and injuries for
oil extraction workers and high risks of exposure to cancer-causing
chemicals for refinery workers and neighboring communities.
The report's release follows the defeat by Congress in March of
a measure to increase fuel efficiency in cars, and in the midst
of a heated fight over drilling for new oil in the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge.
"Up to now, policy makers have largely ignored the full spectrum
of harm to human health and environmental damage posed by our continued
over-dependence on fossil fuels like oil," said co-editor
Dr. Paul Epstein of Harvard Medical School's Center for Health
and the Global Environment. "We present these findings with
the strong hope that public health and safety will be studied further
in order to understand the true costs of our use of oil."
Threats posed at each stage of the oil lifecycle include:
Extraction: Occupationally-related fatalities among workers in
the oil and gas extraction processes are higher than deaths for
workers from all other US industries combined. Oil well workers
risk injury and chronic disease from exposure to chemicals such
as cadmium, arsenic, cyanide, lead and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
(PAHs).
Oil Transport: Many leaks and spills occur in developing nations
where pipeline and oil rig safety regulations are inadequately
enforced, posing particularly high threats to local environments
and human communities.
Refining: Refinery workers' health is threatened through accidents
and from cancer (leukemia), associated with exposure to petroleum
by-products such as benzene. Again, these threats are even greater
in developing nations and poor communities where labor, safety,
emissions standards and environmental laws are lacking or weakly
enforced.
Combustion: Chemical and particulate air pollution are related
to heart and lung disease (chronic obstructive lung disease and
asthma) and premature death. Acid rain leaches lead, copper and
aluminum into drinking water and climate change caused by excess
carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere are associated with more
extreme weather events and the spread of infectious diseases.
The report also describes various harmful impacts of the oil lifecycle
on animals and ecosystems.
The report’s authors hope their initial findings will also
encourage Congress and the White House to take a new direction
in energy policy.
"Our national policymakers appear to be pursuing a path of continued
reliance on oil and coal exploration and combustion," Dr. Epstein
said. "But considering the true costs of such a course – as
well as the potential economic benefits of energy conservation and
investment in new energy technologies – can help guide us towards
clean development in the coming decades"
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