| FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Jeff Gearhart, Ecology
Center, (734) 663-2400 x 117
Charles Griffith, Ecology Center, (734) 663-2400 x 116
Kevin Mills, Environmental Defense, (202) 387-3500
(23 July 2003 -- New
York, NY & Ann Arbor, MI) The use of lead in cars
accounts for the largest remaining source of lead
pollution, finds a new report released today. One car
component, the lead starter battery, is responsible for
the majority of current lead use in the world.
Getting the Lead Out:
Impacts of and Alternatives for Automotive Lead Uses, jointly released by the
Michigan-based Ecology Center and New York-based
Environmental Defense, documents the release of lead
into the environment resulting from automobile
manufacturing, use, and disposal. The report calls on
the automotive industry to phase out lead use in cars,
most notably in the starter battery, and to take
responsibility for ensuring the recovery and proper
management of lead used in cars.
The report finds that
the North American automobile industry is responsible
for the release or transfer each year of more than 300
million pounds (136,508 metric tons) of lead through
mining, smelting, manufacturing, recycling and disposing
of lead-containing automotive components -- primarily
batteries - - and through normal vehicle use.
Over its lifetime, a
car uses as much lead as a house with lead paint, which
has been banned for decades. Lead pollution associated
with autos gets into the air and soil when lead is
produced or recycled for use in cars, and water may be
polluted from the disposal of batteries and autos, or
when wheel weights are lost on roadways.
"Automobiles are
responsible for a majority of lead pollution in North
America, or approximately 16 pounds of lead per vehicle
over its lifetime" said Jeff Gearhart, report author and
Clean Car Campaign Research Director for the Ecology
Center.
The amount of lead in
cars is particularly significant because of its serious
impact on human health, including behavioral problems
and learning disabilities. Children are particularly
susceptible to lead exposure, which occurs when lead
dust contaminates floors, soil, or other areas in which
children live or play.
"Research suggests
there is no safe exposure to lead," said Jerome Nriagu,
professor of environmental health sciences at the
University of Michigan. "Lead poisoning is one of the
most serious environmental health problems in the U.S.
and the world."
Lead is used in a
number of car components, including lead wheel weights,
solder in electronics, and lead car batteries. However,
lead-free alternatives are available. Lead wheel weights
can be replaced with tin or steel weights. Alternative
battery technologies such as nickel-metal hydride
batteries are on the road today in gas-electric hybrid
cars and can be further developed for use in
conventional vehicles.
"Investment in
alternative technologies - much like FedEx is doing by
introducing vehicles with lithium-ion batteries into its
fleet - is critical," said
Kevin Mills, co-author of the report and director of
the Clean Car Campaign at Environmental
Defense. "The automotive industry can safeguard
children's health by improving vehicle design."
"This country had the
good sense to get the lead out of fuel and paint. Now
it's time to get the lead out of the largest remaining
source of lead pollution - cars," said Jim Rochow,
president of the Trust for Lead Poisoning Prevention.
"Children deserve the best chance for healthy
neurological development. The automotive industry can do
their part by removing lead from cars."
To download a copy of
the report, please visit:
http://www.environmentaldefense.org/go/lead. You may also view the
Executive Summary by clicking
here. (Pdf files, Adobe Reader required.) To learn
more about lead use in cars, including fact sheets and a
Q & A,
click here.
# # #
The Ecology Center is a regional
environmental organization based in Ann Arbor, Michigan,
which works for clean air, safe water, and environmental
justice. The Auto Project of the Ecology Center works to
address the toxic and health issues related to the
production of automobiles and promotes cleaner vehicle
technologies. (www.ecocenter.org)
Environmental
Defense, a leading national nonprofit
organization, represents more than 300,000 members.
Since 1967, Environmental Defense has linked science,
economics, law and innovative private-sector
partnerships to create breakthrough solutions to the
most serious environmental problems. |