Diesel fumes cause cancer, the World Health Organization’s cancer agency declared Tuesday, a ruling it said could make exhaust as important a public health threat as secondhand smoke.
The risk of getting cancer from diesel fumes is small, but since so many people breathe in the fumes in some way, the science panel said raising the status of diesel exhaust to carcinogen from “probable carcinogen” was an important shift.
“It’s on the same order of magnitude as passive smoking,” said Kurt
Straif, director of the IARC department that evaluates cancer risks.
“This could be another big push for countries to clean up exhaust from
diesel engines.”
Since so many people are exposed to exhaust, Straif said there could
be many cases of lung cancer connected to the contaminant. He said the
fumes affected groups including pedestrians on the street, ship
passengers and crew, railroad workers, truck drivers, mechanics, miners
and people operating heavy machinery.
The new classification followed a weeklong discussion in Lyon,
France, by an expert panel organized by the International Agency for
Research on Cancer. The panel’s decision stands as the ruling for the
IARC, the cancer arm of the World Health Organization.
The last time the agency considered the status of diesel exhaust was
in 1989, when it was labeled a “probable” carcinogen. Reclassifying
diesel exhaust as carcinogenic puts it into the same category as other
known hazards such as asbestos, alcohol and ultraviolet radiation.
The U.S. government, however, still classifies diesel exhaust as a
likely carcinogen. Experts said new diesel engines spew out fewer fumes
but further studies are needed to assess any potential dangers.
“We don’t have enough evidence to say these new engines are zero
risk, but they are certainly lower risk than before,” said Vincent
Cogliano of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. He added that the
agency had not received any requests to reevaluate whether diesel
definitely causes cancer but said their assessments tend to be in line
with those made by IARC.
Experts in Lyon had analyzed published studies, evidence from animals
and limited research in humans. One of the biggest studies was
published in March by the U.S. National Cancer Institute. That paper
analyzed 12,300 miners for several decades starting in 1947. Researchers
found that miners heavily exposed to diesel exhaust had a higher risk
of dying from lung cancer.
Lobbyists for the diesel industry argued the study wasn’t credible
because researchers didn’t have exact data on how much exposure miners
got in the early years of the study; they simply asked them to remember
what their exposure was like.
Further restrictions on diesel fumes could force the industry to
spend more on developing expensive new technology. Diesel engine makers
and car companies were quick to point out emissions from trucks and
buses have been slashed by more than 95 percent for nitrogen oxides,
particulate and sulfur emissions.
“Diesel exhaust is only a very small contributor to air pollution,”
the Diesel Technology Forum, a group representing companies including
Mercedes, Ford and Chrysler, said in a statement. “In southern
California, more fine particles come from brake and tire wear than from
diesel engines.”
A person’s risk for cancer depends on many variables, from genetic
makeup to the amount and length of time of exposure to dangerous
substances.
Some experts said the new cancer classification wasn’t surprising.
“It’s pretty well known that if you get enough exposure to diesel,
it’s a carcinogen,” said Ken Donaldson, a professor of respiratory
toxicology at the University of Edinburgh who was not part of the IARC
panel. He said the thousands of particles, including some harmful
chemicals, in the exhaust could cause inflammation in the lungs and over
time, that could lead to cancer.
But Donaldson said lung cancer was caused by multiple factors and
that other things like smoking were far more deadly. He said the people
most at risk were those whose jobs exposed them to high levels of diesel
exhaust, like truck drivers, mechanics or miners.
“For the man on the street, nothing has changed,” he said. “It’s a
known risk but a low one for the average person, so people should go
about their business as normal … you could wear a mask if you want to,
but who wants to walk around all the time with a mask on?”
Source: Sun Star