APRIL 14, 2008
DuPont heads this year’s Toxic
100, a list of the top corporate air
polluters in the U.S. from researchers
at the Political Economy Research Institute
at the University of Massachusetts. Nissan
Motor, Archer Daniels Midland, Eastman
Kodak, and General Electric round out the
top five.
The rankings take into account not only
the quantity of releases, but also the relative
toxicity of chemicals, nearby populations,
and transport factors such as prevailing
winds and height of smokestacks, according
to the researchers.
For the first time, the Toxic 100 includes
foreign corporations with facilities in the
U.S. Three of them - Nisssan, Bayer Group,
and Acelor Mittal - made the list’s
top ten.
Top 10 (links go to PERI stats):
E.
I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co.
Nissan
Motor
Archer
Daniels Midland (ADM)
Bayer
Group
Dow
Chemical
Eastman
Kodak
General
Electric
Arcelor
Mittal
U.S.
Steel
ExxonMobil
The full list of the Toxic 100 here.
See http://www.peri.umass.edu/Toxic-100-Index.421.0.html
The Toxic 100: The Top Corporate
Air Polluters in the U.S.
The Toxic 100 index identifies the top U.S.
air polluters among the world's largest corporations.
The index relies on the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency's Risk Screening Environmental
Indicators (RSEI) project. The starting point
for the RSEI is the EPA’s Toxics Release
Inventory (TRI), which reports on releases
of toxic chemicals at facilities across the
United States. TRI data are widely cited
in press stories on "top polluters," but
they have limitations that the Toxic 100
addresses:
- TRI data are reported simply in terms
of total pounds of chemicals. The RSEI
data factors in relative
toxicities of TRI chemicals. Pound-for-pound,
some chemicals are up to ten million times
more hazardous than others.
- The RSEI data account for exposures and
numbers of people impacted by the release
of toxic chemicals based on modeling designed
by the EPA.
- The PERI research team matches RSEI data,
reported on a facility-by-facility basis,
with information on corporate ownership
of these facilities. PERI develops a picture
of overall corporate performance that is
essential to engaging corporate leaders
in finding ways to reduce toxic pollution.
Toxic
100 Index
>> Detailed
company reports (by facility)
Technical Information
>> Technical
notes
>> How
toxic is toxic?
>> How
accurate are the RSEI data?
Toxic
100 Press Release (April 2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact Prof. Michael Ash +1 (413) 545-6329
TOP CORPORATE AIR POLLUTERS NAMED
AMHERST, MA - April 10,
2008 - Researchers at the
Political Economy Research Institute (PERI)
at the University of Massachusetts today
released the Toxic 100, an updated list of
the top corporate air polluters in the United
States.
“The Toxic 100 informs consumers and
shareholders which large corporations release
the most toxic pollutants into our air,” said
James K. Boyce, director of PERI's environment
program. “We measure not just how many
pounds of pollutants are released, but which
are the most toxic and how many people are
at risk. People have a right to know about
toxic hazards to which they are exposed.
Legislators need to understand the effects
of pollution on their constituents.”
The Toxic 100 index is based on air releases
of hundreds of chemicals from industrial
facilities across the United States. The
rankings take into account not only the quantity
of releases, but also the relative toxicity
of chemicals, nearby populations, and transport
factors such as prevailing winds and height
of smokestacks.
The Toxic 100 index identifies the top U.S.
air polluters among corporations that appear
in the “Fortune 500,” “Fortune
Global 500,” “Forbes Global
2000,” and “Standard & Poor's
500” lists of the world's largest corporations.
The Toxic 100's top five companies are E.I.
du Pont de Nemours, Nissan Motor, Archer
Daniels Midland (ADM), Eastman Kodak, and
General Electric.
The new edition of the Toxic 100 for the
first time includes foreign corporations
with facilities in the United States. “This
addition reveals a number of important sources
of industrial toxic pollution,” said
Corporate Toxics Information Project co-director
Michael Ash. Three of the top ten corporations
in the Toxic 100—Nisssan, Bayer Group,
and Acelor Mittal—are foreign-based
firms.
Users of the web-based list can view the
details behind each company’s Toxic
Score, including the names and locations
of individual facilities owned by the corporation,
the specific chemicals emitted by those facilities,
their toxicities, and their contributions
to the company's overall score.
A new feature of the website is a look-up
tool that allows users to access detailed
information on all 7,000 companies with facilities
in the EPA database as well as the Toxic
100 list of top polluters.
The data on chemical releases come from
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's
Toxics Release Inventory (TRI). The TRI is
widely cited in press accounts that identify
the top polluters in various localities.
But reports based on TRI data alone have
three limitations:
- Raw TRI data are reported in total pounds
of chemicals, without taking into account
differences in toxicity. Pound-for-pound,
some chemicals are up to ten million times
more hazardous than others.
- TRI data do not calculate the numbers
of people affected by toxic releases--for
example, the difference between facilities
upwind from densely-populated urban areas
and those located far from population centers.
- TRI data are reported on a facility-by-facility
basis, without combining plants owned by
one corporation to get a picture of overall
corporate performance.
The Toxic 100 index tackles all three problems
by using the most recent Risk-Screening Environmental
Indicators (RSEI) data developed by the EPA.
In addition to the TRI data, the RSEI data
include toxicity weights and the number of
people at risk. PERI researchers added up
facility-by-facility RSEI data released by
the EPA to construct corporate rankings.
“In making this information available,
we are building on the achievements of the
right-to-know movement,” Boyce explains. “Our
goal is to engender public participation
in environmental decision-making, and to
help residents translate the right to know
into the right to clean air.”
###
For further information, contact Professor
Michael Ash at +1 (413) 545-6329 or visit
PERI's Corporate Toxic Information Project
on the web.
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