Canadian wildfires: Air pollution in New York skyrockets

The Big Apple in the fog

Canadian wildfires: Air pollution in New York skyrockets

The Big Apple in the fog. If forest fires have catastrophic consequences in Quebec (150 fires still active, 3.8 million hectares burned in 2023), they also affect the United States to a lesser extent, and in particular New York, where the sky is dark. It has clouded over the past few days and the air has become unbreathable. So much so that the masks of the Covid have reappeared in the streets of Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens, or even in Central Park, the gigantic green lung of the economic and cultural capital of the United States.

The smoke from the fires carries ash and a pungent smell that irritates the eyes and throats of 8.5 million New Yorkers, who are struggling to escape the problem. The mask remains the only solution. "I don't know if it's psychological or physical but I know there are benefits to wearing a mask, although obviously it can't prevent everything," a 43-year-old lawyer told the court. AFP.

"I am saddened today to see that New York City, which usually enjoys good air quality, has one of the worst in the world because of these wildfires" in Canada, s New York Senator Chuck Schumer is alarmed, speaking Wednesday from the Senate in Washington, where he leads the Democratic majority.

The situation is even worse in the large, green, upscale suburbs north of New York along the Hudson River, where the sky turns yellow-orange-gray and the air scrapes your throat.

New York State Governor Kathy Hochul said Wednesday's air quality index dropped from "harmful" to "very harmful" and all outdoor school and extracurricular activities were suspended. or limited "to what is strictly necessary". "This is not the day for marathon training," City Mayor Eric Adams warned, with his sense of understatement.

According to IQAir.com, which monitors pollution levels around the world, the index for New York reached 158, with a concentration of PM2.5 microparticles at a level 14 times higher than the standards of the World Health Organization.

Tuesday evening, this index reached 218, a record. New York's most famous landmarks – Statue of Liberty, Brooklyn Bridge, One World Trade Center Tower – no longer stand out as usual under clear blue skies.

This is what the sunrise over New York looked like today due to wildfire smoke coming over from Canada. Air quality levels are at unhealthy, at over 10 times the guidelines recommended by the WHO. This is the reality of living through the climate crisis. pic.twitter.com/Uww89UPGnZ

"Yesterday, when I came home from my classes, I was breathing in smoke", testified to AFP Evangelia Antonakos, a 47-year-old mathematics teacher, accompanied by her 5-year-old child also wearing a mask.

Further south, the federal capital Washington also woke up on Wednesday to a pungent smell and cloudy skies despite sunny weather.

"The air quality today will be harmful to the health of people with heart or respiratory disease, the elderly, children and adolescents," according to local authorities.

Maybe the worst air quality New York City has seen in a long time as a smokey haze shrouds the sun as it rises behind midtown Manhattan and the Empire State Building, Tuesday

As in New York and the state of Maryland, public schools have canceled outdoor activities for children, including sports.

Washington's air quality index was 199 Wednesday morning — on a scale of 0 to 500 — a level considered "harmful" and expected to persist Thursday. And, according to the fire.airnow.gov site, tens of millions of inhabitants of the northeastern and eastern United States (New York, Washington, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, etc.) are subjected this week to very poor air quality.

This Wednesday, the White House called on Americans in fragile health to "take precautions" in the face of deteriorating air quality.

“We urge everyone in affected areas to be mindful of local conditions. Make sure your neighbours, your friends, your family are well. Take precautions especially if you have health problems,” said Karine-Jean Pierre, spokeswoman for the US executive.

She called this situation "another worrying sign of how the climate crisis is affecting our lives".

As a grayish haze veils the skies of Washington, Joe Biden's spokeswoman clarified that the 80-year-old president did not wear a mask to protect himself.

Note that while the images in New York are quite impressive, the air quality of a large part of the United States is also affected. Thus, more than 100 million Americans were affected by air quality alerts on Wednesday.

These alerts cover most of the northeastern United States, from Chicago in the north to Atlanta in the south. Air quality in this area "is primarily impacted by Canadian fires, although other local pollution emissions and weather may also play a role," the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said. ).