Dictionary Definition
smog n : air pollution by a mixture of smoke and
fog [syn: smogginess]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Smog
English
Noun
- A noxious mixture of particulates and gases that is the result of urban air pollution
Derived terms
Translations
urban air pollution
See also
Dutch
Noun
smog- smog
Extensive Definition
Smog is a kind of air
pollution; the word "smog" is a portmanteau of smoke and fog. Classic smog results from large
amounts of coal burning in an area and is caused by a mixture of
smoke and sulfur
dioxide.
Origin of term
Coinage of the term "smog" is generally
attributed to Dr.
Henry Antoine Des Voeux in his 1905 paper, “Fog and Smoke,” for
a meeting of the Public
Health Congress. The 26 July 1905 edition of the
London newspaper Daily Graphic quoted Des Voeux, “He said it
required no science to see that there was something produced in
great cities which was not found in the country, and that was smoky
fog, or what was known as ‘smog.’” The following day the newspaper
stated that “Dr. Des Voeux did a public service in coining a new
word for the London fog.”
"Smog" also appears in a Jan. 19, 1893, Los
Angeles Times article and is attributed to "a witty English
writer."
Health effects
Smog is a problem in a number of cities and
continues to harm human health. Ground-level
ozone, sulfur
dioxide, nitrogen
dioxide and carbon
monoxide are especially harmful for senior citizens, children,
and people with heart and lung conditions such as emphysema, bronchitis, and asthma. It can inflame breathing
passages, decreasing the lungs' working capacity, and causing
shortness of breath, pain when inhaling deeply, wheezing, and
coughing. It can cause eye and nose irritation and it dries out the
protective membranes of the nose and throat and interferes with the
body's ability to fight infection, increasing susceptibility to
illness. Hospital admissions and respiratory deaths often increase
during periods when ozone levels are high .
The
U.S. EPA has developed an Air Quality index to help explain air
pollution levels to the general public. 8 hour average ozone
concentrations of 85 to 104 ppbv
are described as "Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups", 105 ppbv to 124
ppbv as "unhealthy" and 125 ppb to 404 ppb as "very unhealthy"
http://www.airnow.gov/index.cfm?action=health2.smog1#4.
The "very unhealthy" range for some other pollutants are: 355 μg
m-3 - 424 μg m-3 for PM10; 15.5 ppbv -
30.4ppbv for CO and 0.65 ppbv - 1.24 ppbv for NO2http://www.epa.gov/ttn/oarpg/t1/memoranda/rg701.pdf
Areas affected
Smog can form in almost any climate where
industries or cities release large amounts of air
pollution. However, it is worse during periods of warmer,
sunnier weather when the upper air is warm enough to inhibit
vertical circulation. It is especially prevalent in geologic basins
encircled by hills or mountains. It often stays for an extended
period of time over densely populated cities or urban areas, such
as London,
New
York, Los Angeles,
Mexico
City, Houston, Toronto, Athens, Beijing, Hong Kong, the
Randstad
or Ruhr
Area and can build up to dangerous levels.
Historically, there have been
acute incidents where smog has killed thousands of people in a
single metropolitan area.
London
London has been
known for smog since Roman times. In
1306, concerns over air pollution were sufficient for Edward
I to (briefly) ban coal fires in London. In 1661, John Evelyn's
Fumifugium
suggested burning fragrant wood instead of mineral coal, which he
believed would reduce coughing. The
Ballad of Gresham College the same year describes how the smoke
"does our lungs and spirits choke, Our hanging spoil, and rust our
iron."
Severe episodes of smog continued in the 19th
century and were nicknamed "pea-soupers". The Great
Smog of 1952 darkened the streets of London and killed
approximately 4,000 people in the short time of 4 days (a further
8,000 died from its effects in the following weeks and months).
Initially a flu epidemic was blamed for the
loss of life. In 1956 the Clean
Air Act introduced smokeless
zones in the capital. Consequently, reduced sulfur
dioxide levels made the intense and persistent London smog a
thing of the past. It was after this the great clean-up of London
began and buildings recovered their original stone façades which,
during two centuries, had gradually blackened. Smog caused by
traffic pollution, however, does occur in modern London.
Mexico City
Due to its location in a highland 'bowl', cold
air sinks down onto the urban area of Mexico City,
trapping industrial and vehicle pollution underneath, and turning
it into the most infamous smog-plagued city of Latin America.
Within one generation, the city has changed from being known for
some of the cleanest air of the world into one with some of the
worst pollution, with pollutants like nitrogen
dioxide breaching international health standards by 2-3
times.
Los Angeles
Being in a low basin surrounded by mountains,
Los
Angeles is a notorious victim of smog. The millions of vehicles
in the city due to lack of sufficient public
transportation, plus the added effects of the Los
Angeles/Long
Beach port complex contribute to further air pollution in the
city. While strict regulations by the Californian
government have reduced the number of Stage 1 smog alerts from
several hundred annually to just a few annually, Los Angeles'
pollution level still exceeds health standards and is a pressing
issue for the more than 15 million people who live there.
Tehran
In December 2005, schools and public offices had
to close in Tehran, Iran and
1600 people were taken to hospital, in a severe smog blamed largely
on unfiltered car exhaust.
United States
The
United States Environmental Protection Agency has designated
over 300 U.S. counties to be non-attainment areas for one or more
pollutants tracked as part of the
National Ambient Air Quality Standards. These areas are largely
clustered around large metropolitan areas, with the largest
contiguous non-attainment zones in California and the Northeast.
Various U.S. and Canadian government agencies collaborate to
produce real-time air quality maps and forecasts.
Major incidents in the US
- 1948, October 30-31, Donora, PA: 20 died, 600 hospitalized, thousands more stricken. Lawsuits were not settled until 1951.
- 1953, November, New York: Smog kills between 170 and 260 people.
- 1954, October, Los Angeles: heavy smog shuts down schools and industry for most of the month.
- 1963, New York: blamed for 200 deaths
- 1966, New York: blamed for 169 deaths
Photochemical smog
In the 1950s a new type of smog, known as
photochemical smog, was first described. This forms when sunlight
hits various pollutants in the air and forms a mix of inimicial
chemicals that can be very dangerous. A photochemical smog is the
chemical reaction of sunlight, nitrogen
oxides (NOx) and volatile
organic compounds (VOCs) in the atmosphere, which leaves
airborne particles (called particulate
matter) and ground-level ozone.
Nitrogen oxides are released by nitrogen and
oxygen in the air reacting together under high temperature such as
in the exhaust of fossil
fuel-burning engines in cars, trucks, coal power plants,
and industrial manufacturing factories. VOCs are released from
man-made sources such as gasoline, paints, solvents, pesticides, and biogenic
sources, such as pine and citrus tree emissions.
This noxious mixture of air pollutants can
include the following:
- nitrogen oxides, such as nitrogen dioxide
- tropospheric ozone
- volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
- peroxyacyl nitrates (PAN)
- aldehydes (R'O)
All of these chemicals are usually highly
reactive and oxidizing. Photochemical smog is therefore considered
to be a problem of modern industrialization. It is present in all
modern cities, but it is more common in cities with sunny, warm,
dry climates and a large number of motor vehicles. Because it
travels with the wind, it can affect sparsely populated areas as
well.
Southeast Asia
Smog is a regular problem in Southeast
Asia caused by land and
forest fires in Indonesia,
especially Sumatra and
Kalimantan,
although the less political term haze is preferred in describing the
problem. Farmers and plantation owners are usually responsible for
the fires, which they use to clear tracts of land for further
plantings. Those fires mainly affect Brunei, Indonesia,
Philippines,
Malaysia,
Singapore
and Thailand, and
occasionally Guam and Saipanhttp://www.saipantribune.com/newsstory.aspx?cat=1&newsID=61706
http://www.sun2surf.com/article.cfm?id=15717
The economic losses of the fires in 1997 have been estimated at
US$9.3 billion http://www.haze-online.or.id/help/history.php.
This includes damages in agriculture production, destruction of
forest lands, health, transportation, tourism, and other economic
endeavours. Not included are social, environmental, and
psychological problems and long-term health effects. The
latest bout of haze to occur in Malaysia, Singapore and the
Malacca
Straits is in October 2006, and was caused by smoke from fires
in Indonesia being
blown across the Straits of Malacca by south-westerly winds.
The
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) reacted and
signed
Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution, formed a Regional
Haze Action Plan (RHAP) and established a co-ordination and support unit
(CSU). RHAP, with the help of Canada, established
a monitoring and warning system for forest/vegetation fires and
implemented a Fire Danger Rating System (FDRS). The Malaysian
Meteorological Service (MMS) http://www.kjc.gov.my/english/service/climate/afdrs/fwi.jpg
has issued a daily rating since September 2003. The Indonesians
have been ineffective at enforcing legal policies on errant
farmers.
Natural causes
Pollution index
The severity of smog is often measured using
automated optical instruments such as Nephelometers,
as haze is associated with visibility and traffic control in ports.
Haze however can also be an indication of poor air quality though
this is often better reflected using accurate purpose built air
indexes such as the American Air
Quality Index, the Malaysian API (Air Pollution Index) and the
Singaporean Pollutant
Standards Index.
In hazy conditions, it is likely that the index
will report the suspended particulate level. The disclosure of the
responsible pollutant is mandated in some jurisdictions.
The American AQI is divided into six color coded
categories. Technically AQI runs only from 0 to 500. The 301 to 500
range is categorised as hazardous and colored maroon.
http://www.epa.gov/airnow/aqibroch/aqi.html
The Malaysian API does not have a capped value;
hence its most hazardous readings can go above 500. Above 500, a
state of emergency is declared in the affected area. Usually, this
means that non-essential government services are suspended, and all
ports in the affected area are closed. There may also be
prohibitions on private sector commercial and industrial activities
in the affected area excluding the food sector. So far, state of
emergency rulings due to hazardous API levels were applied to the
Malaysian towns of Port Klang, Kuala Selangor and the state of
Sarawak during the 2005
Malaysian haze and the
1997 Southeast Asian haze.
Cultural references
- The London "pea-soupers" earned the capital the nickname of "The Smoke". Similarly, Edinburgh was known as "Auld Reekie". The smogs feature in many London novels as a motif indicating hidden danger or a mystery, perhaps most overtly in Margery Allingham's The Tiger in the Smoke (1952), but also in Dickens' Bleak House (1852):
- The 1970 made-for-TV movie A Clear and Present Danger, which featured Hal Holbrook, E.G. Marshall, Joseph Campanella, Jack Albertson and Pat Hingle, was one of the first American television network entertainment programs to warn about the problem of smog and air pollution. (This film is not to be confused with the 1994 film with a similar name.)
- 'Smog' or 'Smoggy' has also come into use to describe a resident of Teesside (in North East England) or a supporter of Middlesbrough Football Club, due to the high concentration of chemical and heavy industry in the Teesside area. Although it has now been proven that the Teesside air is cleaner than London, Newcastle, Sunderland and many other British cities, the main source of pollution in the air is now vehicle exhaust fumes, like most urban areas.
- Hedorah, a monster from the Godzilla movie, Godzilla vs. Hedorah, feeds on pollution and is referred to as "The Smog Monster".
See also
Notes and references
- "When smog was a frequent occurrence" WW2 People's War, BBC 2005-08-10. Accessed 2006-08-03.
External links
smog in Bosnian: Smog
smog in Bulgarian: Смог
smog in Czech: Smog
smog in Danish: Smog
smog in German: Smog
smog in Estonian: Sudu
smog in Spanish: Smog
smog in Esperanto: Smogo
smog in French: Smog
smog in Galician: Smog
smog in Korean: 스모그
smog in Croatian: Smog
smog in Indonesian: Asbut
smog in Italian: Smog
smog in Hebrew: ערפיח
smog in Latvian: Smacenis
smog in Lithuanian: Smogas
smog in Hungarian: Szmog
smog in Malay (macrolanguage): Asbut
smog in Dutch: Smog
smog in Japanese: スモッグ
smog in Norwegian: Smog
smog in Norwegian Nynorsk: Smog
smog in Occitan (post 1500): Esmòg
smog in Polish: Smog
smog in Romanian: Smog
smog in Russian: Смог
smog in Albanian: Smog
smog in Simple English: Smog
smog in Finnish: Savusumu
smog in Swedish: Smog
smog in Ukrainian: Смог
smog in Chinese: 煙霧