Wildfire Smoke is Big Hit to Economy – Study

Above, CNBC’s Diana Ollick reports on a study of economic impacts of wildfire smoke events. Turns out that having your customers and employees choking on unbreathable air is bad for business.
I know. Crazy, right?

In other news:

Stat:

Smoke permeates everything and impacts everyone. The visible stew of carbon and particulates typically from emission sources travels in the air, shrouds buildings, suffocates birds, and penetrates deep into the lungs. Now researchers believe wildfire smoke may impact the brain too.

Scientists found that people living in areas with high levels of fine particulate matter, or PM2.5, could have a greater risk of developing dementia in their late stage of life. “We saw specifically that emissions from agriculture and wildfires may be more harmful to the brain,” said Boya Zhang, the lead author of a new study published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine. “It’s really intriguing to us,” the doctoral student at the University of Michigan’s School of Public Health in Ann Arbor told STAT.

It took a while for scientists to find evidence for a link between air pollution and neurodegenerative diseases like dementia. But which specific air pollution sources contribute to this association remains an enigma. The new study is among the first to examine whether PM2.5 from different emission sources carry different risks and show a strong link between exposure to wildfire-specific PM2.5 and neurodegenerative disease.

“It’s a great study, a great population, and it’s got terrific data,” said Marc Weisskopf, a professor of environmental epidemiology and physiology at Harvard T.H Chan School of Public Health. “They’re going the next step to parse out what are the different components of air pollution that matter more than others.”

The latest findings come out of the Environmental Predictors of Cognitive Health and Aging study that Zhang joined in 2019.

As a child growing up in China’s sprawling city of Beijing, infamous for its poor air quality, Zhang experienced terrible pollution levels. Soot was everywhere and she watched Beijing’s skies turn yellow, covered in gritty dust. The hazy scenes never left her memory and sparked her interest in air pollution research.

When wildfires rage, they generate smoke, conjuring PM2.5 and harmful particulate matter far and wide. PM2.5 are tiny bits of particles that can hang in the air for long periods of time. Once a person breathes in these airborne particles, they can bypass the body’s nasal defenses and pump themselves deep into the lungs. With a size about 1/20th of the human hair, they float in the bloodstream and ferry into other vital organs including the brain, damaging cells and causing inflammation.

With Health and Retirement Study data from a nationally representative group of Americans older than 50, Zhang and her team conducted cognitive assessments on nearly 30,000 people with no dementia but who were exposed to different air pollution sources in areas across the U.S. They analyzed the study participants’ exposure levels to PM2.5 between 1998 and 2016, due to emissions from sources including agriculture, road traffic, industry energy, coal combustions, and wildfires. Those who had higher residential PM2.5 levels were linked with increased risk of developing dementia.

One thought on “Wildfire Smoke is Big Hit to Economy – Study”


  1. “Look, I’m sorry this is all happening too fast for you and your little ecosystem friends to adapt to, but would you mind not blowing your ashes all over my face? That is so rude!”

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