Meet the Toxic 100 Corporate Air Polluters

by: Michael Ash and James K. Boyce  |  Political Economy Research Institute

Meet the Toxic 100 Corporate Air Polluters
(Photo: otodo; Edited: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t)

Amherst, MA - Researchers at the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) at the University of Massachusetts Amherst today released the Toxic 100 Air Polluters, an updated list of the top corporate air polluters in the United States.

"The Toxic 100 Air Polluters informs consumers and shareholders which large corporations release the most toxic pollutants into our air," said Professor James Boyce, co-director of PERI's Corporate Toxics Information Project. "We assess 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 Air Polluters 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 toxicity of chemicals, transport factors such as prevailing winds and height of smokestacks, and the number of people exposed.

The top five air polluters among large corporations are the Bayer Group, ExxonMobil, Sunoco, DuPont, and Arcelor Mittal. The Toxic 100 Air Polluters rankings have been expanded to include large privately held firms, such as number 10 Koch Industries, as well as the world's largest publicly traded corporations.

For the first time, the Toxic 100 Air Polluters includes information on the disproportionate risk burden from industrial air toxics for minorities and low-income communities. This makes it possible to compare corporations and facilities in terms of their environmental justice performance as well as overall pollution. For example, the data reveal that minorities bear 65% of the air toxics risk from facilities owned by ExxonMobil, while minorities make up 38% of the U.S. population.

Users of the web-based Toxic 100 Air Polluters list can view the details behind each company's Toxic Score, including the names and locations of individual facilities owned by the corporation, the chemicals emitted by those facilities, and the share of the Toxic Score borne by minorities and people living below the poverty line. The new edition also provides access to this information on all firms operating in the United States, regardless of size. Several smaller firms rank as big air polluters, topped by the Marietta, Ohio, facility of the French-owned Eramet Group and Houston-based Quality Electric Steel Castings LP.

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 consider 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 Air Polluters index tackles all three problems by using the 2006 Risk-Screening Environmental Indicators (RSEI) data, the most recent available from the EPA. In addition to TRI data, RSEI includes toxicity weights and population exposure. 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," explains Professor Michael Ash, co-Director of the Corporate Toxics Information Project. "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."

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The Toxic 100 Air Polluters

The Toxic 100 Air Polluters 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), which assesses the chronic human health risk from industrial toxic releases. The underlying data for RSEI is the EPA’s Toxics Release Inventory (TRI), in which facilities across the U.S. report their releases of toxic chemicals. In addition to the amount of toxic chemicals released, RSEI also includes the degree of toxicity and population exposure. The Toxic 100 Air Polluters ranks corporations based on the chronic human health risk from all of their U.S. polluting facilities.

Full List of Top Toxic 100 Air Polluters

Toxic 100 Air Polluters Detailed Company Reports

How Toxic is Toxic?

Technical Notes

How Accurate are the RSEI Data on Toxic Air Pollution?

Toxic 100 Air Polluters Archive

For further information, contact Professor Michael Ash or Professor James K. Boyce at +1 (413) 577-0816 or peri@peri.umass.edu or visit PERI's Corporate Toxic Information Project on the web at http://toxic100.org.  

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If we were to enforce the

If we were to enforce the rules of the game under
CAPITALISM, any entity which produces/distributes goods and services by poisoning our air, water, food and environment would be assessed fines for public health until they reduced their negative impact on the rest of us to zero. What polluters have done is tantamount to you and I building a palace for tourists, extending the raw sewage pipe to our neighbors yard, and having governments defend us against the death and destruction in our neighbors homes. We must enforce laws to make Capitalism RESPONSIBLE, not destructive.



CAN ANYONE SAY : CHEMTRAILS?

CAN ANYONE SAY : CHEMTRAILS?



Mr. President, can you speak

Mr. President, can you speak to the issue
of petro and biochem pollution.
BBB (Barely Better than Bush): Well, let me
say this about that, there's some fallout from this
issue to the left of the smoke stack and there's some fallout from this issue to the right of the
smoke stack. All in all we are working in
a bipartisanly way to make sure that the
fallout from this issue falls equally on all sides.



Here it is in black and

Here it is in black and white, the effects of "externalities." It is a trade-off like working as a coal-miner. You trade a job with an income NOW for black lung and death LATER. How else could this trade off make sense except in a society where all the power of life and death is in the hands of people [CEOs] for whom human life is not a serious consideration, except that their own lives, their children's lives, will be forfeit as well. Oh, of course, since they have all the money, they will be able to have their children's asthma and cancer successfully treated, and to hell with the rest of us losers in the Darwinian war of survival. It's not only sick and insane, it's stupid. And interestingly enough it's our fault because we have bought into the idea that there is a class of smart people who should be in charge. That works as long as you have a Lincoln or a Roosevelt in office. But all too often we've had a Nixon or a Bush for totally irrational reasons having to do with sex or drugs or race or ...



PERI has done an enormous

PERI has done an enormous service in compiling this information. Let's hope it is used to sue these corporate criminals and force our legislators to stand up to the lobbyists on behalf of their constituents. They should pass and enforce laws to protect our environment.

Join the coffeepartyusa to get corporate money out of the elections process!

Read more about Koch and the effects of toxic greenhouse gases on vegetation here: www.witsendnj.blogspot.com