"A two-decade-old crackdown on smog and soot under the Clean Air Act will yield about $2 trillion in annual benefits by 2020, according to a study that was released by U.S. EPA this morning and was touted as proof that the embattled agency's rules are an economic boon for the American people.
Those rules prevented an estimated 160,000 deaths last year, according to the analysis, and within a decade, that number is projected to rise to about 230,000. That year, the new pollution controls will prevent an estimated 200,000 cases of heart disease, 2.4 million asthma flare-ups and 22.4 million missed school and work days.
The study was ordered by the 1990 amendments to the Clean Air Act, which were signed into law by President George H.W. Bush. Most of the stricter limits on smog and soot also date back to those amendments, which passed with support from both parties."
Gabriel Nelson reports for Greenwire March 1, 2011.
SEE ALSO:
"RGGI Cap-And-Trade Boosted State Economies: Report" (Huffington Post)
Benefits of Clean Air Act Rules to Reach $2 Trillion a Year, EPA Says
Source: Greenwire, 03/02/2011