Tuesday, 5 May 2026
Las Vegas News
  • About Us
  • Our Authors
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • News
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Las Vegas
  • Las
  • Vegas
  • news
  • Trump
  • crime
  • entertainment
  • politics
  • Nevada
  • man
Las Vegas NewsLas Vegas News
Font ResizerAa
  • About Us
  • Our Authors
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Search
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
News

Foreign Emissions Grant Phoenix and Salt Lake City a Pass on Stricter Smog Rules

By Matthias Binder May 1, 2026
Smog in Phoenix and Salt Lake City? The E.P.A. is blaming Asia
Smog in Phoenix and Salt Lake City? The E.P.A. is blaming Asia - Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pixabay)
SHARE

Smog in Phoenix and Salt Lake City? The E.P.A. is blaming Asia

Contents
EPA’s Use of a Rarely Invoked ProvisionThe Role of Distant Pollution SourcesHealth Toll of Lingering OzonePushback from Environmental AdvocatesBalancing Local Action and Global Realities

Smog in Phoenix and Salt Lake City? The E.P.A. is blaming Asia – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pixabay)

Residents in Phoenix and the Salt Lake City area have endured persistent ozone pollution that irritates lungs and exacerbates asthma, yet stricter federal controls now appear unlikely. The Environmental Protection Agency recently decided these regions would have met air quality standards without interference from abroad, sparing them reclassification to more severe nonattainment status.[1][2] This move highlights growing recognition of transboundary pollution, though critics argue it overlooks controllable local sources.

EPA’s Use of a Rarely Invoked Provision

On March 23, 2026, the EPA finalized a determination for the Phoenix-Mesa area under Section 179B of the Clean Air Act. The agency concluded the region would have attained the 2015 ozone standard of 70 parts per billion by its August 3, 2024, deadline absent international emissions.[1] This marked the first application of the provision since EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin rescinded prior restrictive guidance in April 2025.

- Advertisement -

A similar proposal emerged for Utah’s Northern Wasatch Front, encompassing Salt Lake City, on April 21, 2026. The EPA aims to repeal a December 2024 reclassification from moderate to serious nonattainment, citing technical analysis that international emissions and wildfire smoke drove exceedances.[2] Both decisions prevent additional requirements like enhanced permitting and emission offsets for industries and vehicles.

The Role of Distant Pollution Sources

Modeling from regional agencies and the EPA attributes much of the ozone problem to factors beyond local control. In Phoenix-Mesa, roughly 80 percent of ozone stems from uncontrollable sources, including cross-border pollution from Mexico and Asia, as well as wildfires.[3] The remaining 20 percent arises from local activities such as vehicles, power plants, and volatile organic compounds from consumer products.

Utah officials have noted that at least 20 percent of Western ozone travels from Asia, compounded by the Wasatch Front’s inversion layers that trap pollutants.[3] Ozone forms when sunlight reacts with nitrogen oxides and volatile organics, and precursors can drift thousands of miles on wind currents. These findings allowed the areas to demonstrate compliance in hypothetical scenarios excluding foreign contributions.

Health Toll of Lingering Ozone

Phoenix ranks fourth nationwide for ozone pollution, earning an F grade from the American Lung Association, while Salt Lake City fares similarly poor.[3] Exposure triggers respiratory infections, lung irritation, and heightened risks for heart disease, hitting children, the elderly, and asthmatics hardest.

Despite local emission reductions, three-year averages exceeded 80 parts per billion in Phoenix from 2021 to 2023. Valley topography acts like a bowl, pooling smog, while Utah’s winter inversions worsen winter air quality. Families continue monitoring air quality indexes, limiting outdoor time on bad days.

- Advertisement -
Pollution Source Phoenix-Mesa Estimate Key Examples
Uncontrollable (80%) International, wildfires Mexico, Asia, natural events
Local (20%) Human-made Cars, factories, VOCs

Pushback from Environmental Advocates

Environmental groups decried the decisions as a dodge for local accountability. Earthjustice senior attorney David Baron called the Phoenix waiver “illegal and just plain wrong,” arguing most pollution originates domestically from industry and vehicles.[4] He emphasized ozone’s dangers to vulnerable groups.

Sierra Club’s Luis Miranda criticized the Utah proposal, stating, “Crying wolf about foreign emissions won’t change the fact that the vast majority of our air pollution comes from transportation and local industry.”[5] Critics fear weakened Clean Air Act enforcement could stall progress, benefiting polluters over public health. Local officials, however, welcomed the relief, with Maricopa Association of Governments’ Matthew Poppen noting efforts addressed all solvable portions.[3]

Balancing Local Action and Global Realities

The exemptions maintain moderate nonattainment obligations, requiring ongoing plans for reasonable progress. EPA officials like acting regional administrator Mike Martucci framed the moves as fairness: “not punishing Americans for emissions from countries that do not have our same environmental standards.”[1]

- Advertisement -

As climate patterns shift and Asian economies grow, trans-Pacific pollution may intensify. For Southwest residents, the debate underscores a tension: how much control exists over air breathed daily, when winds carry contaminants from afar? Local initiatives persist, but ultimate clarity demands both domestic vigilance and international cooperation.

Previous Article 2026’s Pluto Retrograde in Aquarius: What Will Surface from the Shadows? Pluto Retrograde in Aquarius 2026: Shadows Rise in the Age of Innovation
Next Article May 2026 Horoscope May 2026 Cosmic Shifts: Full Moon Sparks Soulmate Energy in Decan Horoscopes
Advertisement
Por qué un centro de datos de Nevada quiere construir su propia central temporal de gas natural
Fleet Data Centers Eyes Temporary Gas Power Plants to Fuel Nevada’s Data Boom
News
‘They were the better team’: Golden Knights have room to improve in Game 2
Tortorella’s Blunt Assessment: Ducks Outplayed Golden Knights in Game 1 Despite 3-1 Loss
News
B.C. judge slashes lawyer's $425,000 bill for settling grandmother's will
B.C. Court Reduces Lawyer’s $425,000 Estate Fee to $60,000 in Fee Review Ruling
News
Metro Vancouver homebuyers finding 'sweet spot' in townhome units, new report says
Townhomes Capture Hearts of Metro Vancouver Buyers in Era of Condo Surplus
News
FortisBC violating environmental permit for more than a year
FortisBC’s Squamish Pipeline Project Overflows Creek with Excess Wastewater for 14 Months
News
Categories
Archives
May 2026
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Apr    
- Advertisement -

You Might Also Like

Jury to decide whether woman intentionally ran over partner’s head in NLV
News

North Las Vegas Jury to Weigh Intent in Fatal SUV Runover Case

February 25, 2026
Thousands of Cubans gather in Havana’s Revolution Square for May Day celebrations
News

Havana’s Revolution Square Pulsates with May Day Unity

May 1, 2026
12 people caught giving alcohol to minors in Clovis
News

Clovis Police Launch Dual Stings, Snaring 12 in Underage Alcohol Crackdown

March 16, 2026
News

Home violence survivor shares story as advocates push for change at Nevada Legislature

March 8, 2025

© Las Vegas News. All Rights Reserved – Some articles are generated by AI.

A WD Strategies Brand.

Go to mobile version
Welcome to Foxiz
Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?