
Emissions from vehicles and power plants in Southern Nevada are drifting over nearby national parks, from the Grand Canyon to Death Valley, leaving a haze of pollution over the protected areas. (Adobe Stock)
The study found the Las Vegas region sends thousands of tons each year of nitrogen oxide emissions into national parks, including the Grand Canyon and Death Valley, as well as the Lake Mead National Recreation Area. The Trump administration wants to cut what it said are “excessive” federal regulations on pollution and shift rulemaking power to the states.
As part of the push, conservative leaders want to repeal a 2009 federal court Endangerment Finding, which is the foundation for regulating greenhouse gas emissions. The EPA is also reconsidering its Regional Haze Program, which was designed to protect visibility and air quality in national parks.
Mark Rose, Sierra Nevada and senior clean air program manager for the association, said when urban pollution is not controlled, national parks in rural areas can suffer from the same bad air.
“Pollution from vehicle tailpipes doesn’t follow park boundaries,” Rose pointed out. “Much of the pollution that we see is coming from these urban areas that can be hundreds of miles away from a park but is traveling and then impacting air quality in the national park.”
Rose added if the federal government relaxes regulations governing carbon dioxide and nitrogen oxides, dozens of America’s natural wonders could have little or no protection from millions of tons of the gases every year.
Related: New study finds that air pollution could be threatening the success of IVF treatment
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