Smog no longer an issue in Ottawa Valley after coal plant closures - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 11:45 AM | Calgary | -13.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Smog no longer an issue in Ottawa Valley after coal plant closures

It's quite rare to see smog advisories in the Ottawa Valley these days, but that wasn't always the case.

'This is a huge achievement. It's a good news story for the environment,' environment professor says

A smog warning was issued when this haze formed over the Ottawa skyline on June 27, 2007. These days, smog advisories are quite rare in the region. (Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press)

Remember the last time there was a smog advisory in the Ottawa Valley?

You'd have to go back to 2014. There were none last yearand none so far thisyear.

Things weren't so nice about a decade ago, before Ontario closed all of itscoal-fired power generation plants (the last, in Thunder Bay, closed in 2014).

In 2005 there were 25 smog advisory days in the Ottawa area and53 across Ontario. By 2009there were just four smog advisoriesin the valley. And by 2013, there was only one such advisory.

"This is a huge achievement. It's a good news story for the environment," saidPaul Parker, a faculty of environmentprofessor atthe University of Waterloo, onCBC Radio'sOttawa Morningon Monday.

"On our poor days, half of the pollution comes in from the U.S., and then we were adding on top of it. So what we've done is we've dramatically reduced what we added on top of it, and so that keeps us below the worst thresholds."

Vehicles and small engines for lawnmowers, leafblowers and the like contribute most towhat remaining pollution exists in our region, along with pollution from the United States.

Parker says a focus on switchinggas-powered small enginesto electric ones would be a good next step for the province to reduce pollution even further.