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Showing posts from November, 2016

Spoiling An Otherwise Clean Air Day

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Here's another excellent example of how wood burning for home heating pollutes a neighbourhood. Look at how clean the air is in most other locations. Our sensor on Jolly Brothers Road on Gabriola Island went into the hazardous zone, and the see-saw pattern is wood burning without a doubt.

A comparison of weekly particulate levels across sample cities and towns

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There are lots of ways to look at measurements for air pollution and different time frames that people and regulators look at. If we look at the weekly average  for particulate at the PM 2.5 scale across several PurpleAir sensors, some interesting and troubling trends become evident. Here are some 7 day averages from a sample of sensors in British Columbia and one wild card sensor - downtown Los Angeles near Dodger Stadium. LA is known around the world for the poor quality of its air. Here's what we see. The worst weekly average in Canada can be found in Prince George BC with 16.06. Prince George has an active pulp and paper mill, other significant sources of industrial pollution, and lots of people who burn wood for residential heating. In Parksville we see a weekly average of 10.85. This is mostly a retirement community on Vancouver Island and the readings from this sensor are likely due fully to wood smoke emissions from residential sources. One of our sensor

BC Lung Association is no friend to lung health

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Wood smoke will be BC Lung's tainted blood scandal one day. Tainted air!

Wood smoke is the new second-hand cigarette smoke

Wood smoke is the new second-hand cigarette smoke. This article and television news clip makes some excellent points. To read the article and view the video click here .

Clean "country" air is an illusion

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If you moved to the "country" for clean air and a healthy lifestyle it's time to rethink things. Right now air quality on Gabriola Island is mosty in the warning zone due to wood burning appliances like woodstoves and fireplaces with air quality readings of over 100. By contrast downtown Vancouver at rush hour is in the 50s and downtown Victoria is in the teens.