Worldwide - There's new evidence that exposure to exhaust from diesel engines increases the risk of lung cancer.
Diesel
exhaust has long been classified as a probable carcinogen. But the
20-year study from the National Cancer Institute took a closer look by
tracking more than 12,000 workers in certain kinds of mines — facilities
that mined for potash, lime and other nonmetals. They breathed varying
levels of exhaust from diesel-powered equipment, levels higher than the
general population encounters.
The
most heavily exposed miners had three times the risk of death from lung
cancer compared to workers with the lowest exposures, said the study
released Friday by the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
But even workers with lower exposures had a 50 percent increased risk, wrote lead author Debra Silverman, an NCI epidemiologist.
"Our
findings are important not only for miners but also for the 1.4 million
American workers and the 3 million European workers exposed to diesel
exhaust, and for urban populations worldwide," Silverman wrote.
She
pointed to some highly polluted cities in China, Mexico and Portugal
that in past years have reported diesel exposure levels that over long
periods could be comparable to those experienced by miners with lower
exposures.
Litigation from some mining companies had delayed release of the study findings.
A
separate industry group not involved in that litigation said Friday
that the study looked back at mines using decades-old equipment, and
there's far less pollution from diesel engines today.
"Diesel
engine and equipment makers, fuel refiners and emissions control
technology manufacturers have invested billions of dollars in research
to develop and deploy technologies and strategies that reduce engine
emissions, now ultimately to near zero levels to meet increasingly
stringent clean air standards here in the United States and around the
world," said Allen Schaeffer of the nonprofit Diesel Technology Forum.
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