Wildfires take over from industry as major source of cancer-causing air toxins: study
Wildfires have taken over from industry as a major source of a group of cancer-causing chemical toxins in the air, Environment Canada says.
The first national assessment of polycyclic aromatic compounds in more than 25 years has found that air has improved around aluminum and steel plants. But wildfires and vehicles have stepped in to keep average concentrations at about the same level that they were in the 1990s, says federal researcher Elisabeth Galarneau.
“Those big industrial point sources have been reduced to a very small fraction of the total,” she says. “The largest (remaining) source by far is the natural emissions from forest fires.”
The levels are still high enough in many places across the country to exceed health guidelines, the assessment found.