Philip Morris
Anthology of 950000's Environmental Myths
Fields
- Author
- Singer, S.F.
- Area
- WORLDWIDE REG AFFAIRS/LIBRARY
- Type
- COMP, COMPUTER PRINTOUT
- NEWS, NEWS ARTICLE
- Site
- N403
- Named Person
- Delaney
- Singer, S.F.
- Request
- Stmn/R1-048
- Document File
- 2048280245/2048280868/Ets Congressional Research Svce. (Crs)@ 2048280246/2048280600/Ets Crs Compilation 940000 - 960000
- Named Organization
- OSHA, Occupational Safety & Health Administration
- Science + Environmental Policy Project
- US Congress
- Congressional Research Service
- Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
- Science + Environmental Policy Project
- Author (Organization)
- News World Communications
- Washington Times
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Master ID
- 2048280248/0599
Related Documents:- 2048280248-0249 Congressional Research Service Reports on Ets and Lung Cancer
- 2048280250 1
- 2048280251-0329 Crs Report for Congress Environmental Tobacco Smoke and Lung Cancer Risk
- 2048280330 2
- 2048280331-0332
- 2048280333 Ford Calls for Reopening of OSHA Hearings on Smoking Bans
- 2048280334 Epa / OSHA Findings on Passive Smoking
- 2048280335
- 2048280336-0337 Proposed Ban on Smoking in the Workplace
- 2048280338 3
- 2048280339 Philip Morris Statement on the Congressional Research Service Report on 'environmental Tobacco Smoke and Lung Cancer Risk'
- 2048280340-0341 Overview of the Crs Report on Ets and Lung Cancer Risk
- 2048280342 3
- 2048280343 A Conversation with Mike Wallace
- 2048280344 Second Smoke's Dangers Doubted Report Critical of Epa, OSHA
- 2048280345 Editorial Up in Smoke
- 2048280346-0347 Epa Watch
- 2048280348
- 2048280348A-0349 Study Prompts Call for OSHA to Reopen Hearings on Rule Over Secondhand Smoke
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- 2048280352-0353 Secondhand Smoke Danger Relies on Wisps of Evidence 9500029108
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- 2048280361 Scientific Proof Eludes Those Who Damn Second-Hand Smoke
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- 2048280404-0406
- 2048280407 Comments on the Crs Report 'environmental Tobacco Smoke and Lung Cancer Risk'
- 2048280408 6
- 2048280409-0412
- 2048280413 7
- 2048280414 Even Congressional Research Service Now Reluctantly Admits:Tobacco Smoke Causes High Levels of Cancer in Nonsmokers
- 2048280415 Congressional Research Service Also Concludes Tobacco Smoke Causes Lung Cancer in Nonsmokers
- 2048280416 Crs Says Tobacco Smoke Kills Nonsmokers But Overall Report Is Flawed and Misleading
- 2048280417 Letters Being Near A Lit Cigarette Has Risks - Whether You're Smoking It or Not
- 2048280418 8
- 2048280419-0488 Crs Report for Congress Cigarette Taxes to Fund Health Care Reform: An Economic Analysis
- 2048280489 9
- 2048280490-0496 Discussion of Source of Claims of 50,000 Deaths From Passive Smoking
- 2048280497 10
- 2048280498-0519 Hearing to Discuss the Possible Health Effects to Non-Smokers of Environmental Tobacco Smoke Wednesday, 940511 9:30 A.M. Hart Senate Office Building, Rm. 216
- 2048280520 11
- 2048280521-0536 Statement of Dr. Jane G. Gravelle Senior Specialist in Economic Policy and Dennis Zimmerman Specialist in Public Finance Congressional Research Service Before the Subcommittee on Clean Air and Nuclear Regulation Committee on Environment and Public Works United States Senate 940511 on Environmental Tobacco Smoke
- 2048280537 12
- 2048280538-0553 Cigarette Taxes to Fund Health Care Reform
- 2048280554 13
- 2048280555-0557
- 2048280558-0572
- 2048280573 14
- 2048280574-0582 Comments on Congressional Research Service Assessment of the Health Risks of Environmental Tobacco Smoke
- 2048280583 15
- 2048280584-0598 Comments on the Workshop Draft of Environmental Tobacco Smoke and Lung Cancer
- 2048280599
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
- mtr65e00
Document Images
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Page 6
LEVEL 1 - 5 OF 47 STORIES
Copyright 1996 News World Communications, Inc.
The Washington Times
February 11, 1996, Sunday, Final Edition
SECTION: Part B; COMMENTARY; Pg. B3
LENGTH: 1377 words
HEADLINE: Anthology of 1995's environmental myths
BYLINE: S. Fred Singer
BODY:
The primary mission of the Science & Environmental Policy Project has been
to study and analyze how science is used - or missused - in the setting of
federal environmental policies, and then expose the most egregious examples of
environmental malfeasance. There are so many: Superfund, asbestos, Alar, acid
rain, to mention just a few - all of them costing mega-billions and backed by
insubstantial science.
When we decided to list the greatest environmental myths of 1995, our board _
of experts finally settled on the following five topics that demonstrate
distortion or misuse of science in shaping policies. We present them here to
educate policy-makers and the public in the hope that the publicity will lead to
more cost-effective policies and a healthier environment.
(1) Global warming and the Climate Treaty: During 1995, scare stories about
a future catastrophic greenhouse warming gained much momentum, while at the same
time the evidence for such warming became weaker and weaker. At the first
"Conference of the Parties" to the Global Climate Treaty in Berlin in April, the
science was ignored while the assembled "statesmen" went ahead to establish a
permanent secretariat and plan further mega-meetings. In September, at the
initiative of Al Gore, a Washington conference promoted a new fear tied to
global warming: a spread of tropical diseases putting 3 billion people at risk.
Finally, in November (in Madrid) and December (in Rome), the U.N.-sponsored
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the scientific arm of the
Treaty, managed to approve two pre-drafted summary reports. These can
charitably be described as being "economical with the truth." By selectively
presenting some facts but-withholding crucial information (such as that the data
show a warming rate of zero!), they convey the impression of impending doom and
provide a spur for hasty and ill-advised action to cut the use of energy fuels.
With the Treaty bureaucracy charging ahead without regard for the scientific
evidence, we'd better withdraw from the Treaty before a U.N. agency forces us
into economic ruin.
(2) Stratospheric ozone and skin cancer: Dec. 31, 1995, marked the date
when the production of CFCs ("freons") and other useful chemicals was banned

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The Washington Times, February 11, 1996
Page 7
in the mistaken belief this policy would avert an epidemic of skin cancer.
Scientific evidence does not support this hasty action, which was largely based
on a 1992 press conference that intimated an imminent "Arctic ozone hole" that
never was. There is no data to indicate that ultraviolet radiation reaching the
Earth's surface is increasing by even a few percent - as might be expected if
the ozone layer were thinning. In the meantime, it is generally recognized that
W increases naturally when one moves toward the equator; W levels in Florida
are 200 percent to 300 percent higher than in New England! Furthermore,
laboratory measurements show that deadly melanoma skin cancers would not be
affected by the atmospheric ozone level.
Notwithstanding all the evidence, in testimony to Congress in August and
again in September, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) claimed the CFC
ban will produce benefits of as much as $32 trillion (!), with benefit-cost
ratios of 700-1,000! This is sheer fantasy, as well as bad science and
economics. EPA should add to this to the tens of millions of motorists who
won't be able to run their car air conditioners except by shelling out $200 to
$800 - or risking jail through buying smuggled CFC on the black market.
(3) The secondhand smoke scare: In November 1995, the Congressional
Research Service, the research arm of the U.S. Congress, issued a scholarly
report that reviewed published studies bearing on possible lung cancer effects
on nonsmokers from environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), often referred to as
"secondhand" smoke. The CRS found no support for the 1992 action of the EPA
that declared ETS a "Class A carcinogcn" in the workplace - which in turn would
permit the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to regulate
smoking in business establishments.
The problem is that the risk for lung cancer is not statistically
significant under the usual definition of that term. To arrive at its
conclusion, the EPA changed the definition by accepting a lower standard of
"significance." This cavalier treatment of data has been widely criticized by
independent academic scientists; EPA was accused of "manipulation of data,"
violation of "time-honored statistical principles," and worse.
This does not mean that ETS does not or cannot cause lung cancer in
nonsmokers; it only means that the EPA distorted science to establish a
correlation and suggest a causation that cannot be proven with the data at hand.
(4) The phony radon scare: Before World War II, radioactivity in small doses
was considered healthful; rich people went to spas to drink the slightly
radioactive water and exposed themselves to radon in old uranium mines. The
explosion of two atomic bombs changed all that; it has produced an exaggerated
fear of radioactivity, no matter how small. It was only in 1995, however, that
good evidence was published showing the existence of a "threshold," below which
health effects seem to disappear.
Of course, this result could have been predicted. After all, we are
constantly exposed to nuclear radiation from natural sources. The ground we
walk on is slightly radioactive. Cosmic rays are_everywhere and increase in
intensity with altitude. Long-term exposure in jet aircraft can quickly
accumulate a substantial radiation dose. Even our bodies contain natural
radioactivity.
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The Washington Times, February 11, 1996
Page 8
Thus it is somewhat ironic that the EPA is stirring up more fears just as we
learn that naturally occurring radon is a very minor risk for lung cancer.
Despite the evidence, however, EPA refuses to accept the "threshold hypothesis"
and insists on calculating cancer rates that are quite unrealistic. By
enlisting private "radon partners," they have tried to scare households ito
costly mitigation programs against radon. At $1,000 or more per home, such
programs could soon reach the mega-billion range. Still, EPA seems to be doing
all it can to defend its announced position that radon is the "No. 1
environmental health hazard."
(5) The wasteful pursuit of zero risk: Perhaps the costliest of all
regulations is embodied in law in the 1958 Delaney clause, which mandates
essentially zero risk. It bans the addition to food of any substance that has
been found to cause cancer when fed in huge doses to rats. Its spirit -"one
molecule can kill" - pervades the Superfund law and other laws that involve the
regulation of chemicals thought to be cancer-producing: PCB, dioxin, ETS, Alar,
etc. In many laws the risk level is set at 1-in-a-million. Even though this is
better than a zero-risk level, it is still arbitrary and unrealistic - since the
normal cancer risk is 25 percent - i.e., 250,000-in-a-million. The EPA doesn't
want it to rise to 250,001-in-a-million - no matter how high the cost.
During 1995, Congress made its first attempt - and almost succeeded - to
rationalize federal policies for a better environment by introducing legislation
in the House and Senate to balance the cost of regulation against the benefits.
In that way, our limited resources could be brought to bear against real risks
to human health and not squandered on "phantom risks." Ideally, it would allow
consideration of comparative risk, instead of spending funds on the "scare of
the year" - whether asbestos, radon, lead, pesticides, etc. One should consider
that environmental regulation is now costing the nation more than $150 billion
per year, or more than $1,500 per household. Once spent, that money cannot then
be used to buy food, medicine, or other essentials.
Hopefully, the 104th Congress will complete the job in 1996 and repeal the
Delaney clause and thereby the whole "zero-risk" mentality. The nation will be
better off for it.
S. Fred Singer is president of The Science & Envirorimental Policy Project.
GRAPHIC: Illustration, NO CAPTION, By DB 96
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
LOAD-DATE: February 11, 1996
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