EcoMall

EXHAUST LEAKING INTO SCHOOL BUSES
STUDY FINDS

Children riding on school buses are breathing in more pollution than people standing out on the streets, U.S. researchers concluded in a new study.

They found that exhaust from the buses was leaking into the passenger cabin, and probably affecting the children. Older buses were the worst, they found.

And exhaust �scrubbers� did little to help, perhaps because the exhaust is coming inside before it gets to the devices, the team at the University of California, Berkeley, found.

�In a single day, a child riding a school bus will breathe in anywhere from seven to 70 times more exhaust from that bus than a typical Los Angeles resident will inhale from all school bus emissions in the area,� said Julian Marshall, a researcher who led the study.

'Shocking' conclusion

�For every metric ton of pollution emitted by a school bus, the cumulative mass of pollution inhaled by the 40 or so kids on that bus is comparable to, or in many cases larger than, the cumulative mass inhaled by all the other people in an urban area,� Marshall added in a statement.

�That the values were even close was shocking.�

The report did not specify whether the problem was caused by damaged exhaust pipes or faulty design.

Writing in the journal Environmental Science and Technology, Marshall and colleagues said they analyzed results from tracer-gas experiments conducted by scientists at UCLA and UC Riverside.

They measured the air in six empty school buses traveling through established routes in Los Angeles, with windows both opened and closed.

Gas tracer detected leaks

Five of the buses were diesel and built between 1975 and 1998. One 1998 model was equipped with a particle trap to reduce emissions. A sixth bus, built in 2002, ran on compressed natural gas.

The researchers put a gas called sulfur hexafluoride into the exhaust system and then set tracers to detect it. The gas is not normally found in air, so the researchers could tell whether emissions came from the bus�s own exhaust.

�We determined that concentrations of key air pollutants were higher inside the bus cabins than outside the cabins,� said Eduardo Behrentz, who also worked on the study.

�Because so many children ride school buses, reducing the emissions of a school bus would give policymakers more bang for their buck than the same reduction of emissions from other diesel vehicles, such as an 18-wheeler or a construction truck,� said Marshall.

Click below to e-mail this article to a friend
or to post a link on your favorite sites.
Thank you! Bookmark and Share

Written by: Planet Ark

RELATED LINKS:


AIR PURIFICATION AROMATHERAPY BABIES
BEDDING BIRDING BODY CARE
BOOKS BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BUSINESS-TO-BUSINESS
CAMPING CATALOGUES CLASSIFIEDS
CLEANING PRODUCTS CLOTHING COMPUTER PRODUCTS
CONSTRUCTION CONSULTANTS CRAFTS
ECO KIDS ECO TRAVEL EDUCATION
ENERGY CONSERVATION ENERGY EFFICIENT HOMES ENGINEERING
FITNESS-YOGA FLOWERS FOODS
FOOTWEAR FURNITURE GARDEN
GIFTS HARDWARE HEMP
HERBS HOUSEHOLD INDUSTRY
INVESTMENTS JEWELRY LIGHTING
MAGAZINES MUSIC NATURAL HEALTH
NATURAL PEST CONTROL NEW AGE OFFICE
OUTDOORS PAPER PETS
PROMOTIONAL RESOURCES RECYCLED SAFE ENVIRONMENTS
SEEKING CAPITAL SHELTERS SOLAR-WIND
TOYS TRANSPORTATION VIDEOS
VITAMINS WATER WEATHER
WHOLESALE WOOD HOW TO ADVERTISE

 Green Living Magazine
Updated Daily!

* * * IN-HOUSE RESOURCES * * *
WHAT'S NEW ACTIVISM ALERTS DAILY ECO NEWS
LOCAL RESOURCES DATABASE ASK THE EXPERTS ECO CHAT
ECO FORUMS ARTICLES ECO QUOTES
INTERVIEWS & SPEECHES NON-PROFIT GROUPS ECO LINKS
KIDS LINKS RENEWABLE ENERGY GOVERNMENT/EDUCATION
VEGGIE RESTAURANTS ECO AUDIO/VIDEO EVENTS
COMMUNICATIONS WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING ACCOLADES
AWARDS E-MAIL MAILING LIST

EcoMall