Br J Cancer. 2009 Oct 6; 101(7):1207-12.

Cannabis, tobacco and domestic fumes intake are associated with nasopharyngeal carcinoma in North Africa.

Feng BJ, Khyatti M, Ben-Ayoub W, Dahmoul S, Ayad M, Maachi F, Bedadra W, Abdoun M, Mesli S, Bakkali H, Jalbout M, Hamdi-Cherif M, Boualga K, Bouaouina N, Chouchane L, Benider A, Ben-Ayed F, Goldgar DE, Corbex M. Genetic Epidemiology Group, International Agency for Research on Cancer, 69372 Lyon, France.

bingjian.feng@hsc.utah.edu

BACKGROUND: The lifestyle risk factors for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) in North Africa are not known.

METHODS: From 2002 to 2005, we interviewed 636 patients and 615 controls from Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia, frequency-matched by centre, age, sex, and childhood household type (urban/rural). Conditional logistic regression was used to evaluate the association of lifestyles with NPC risk, controlling for socioeconomic status and dietary risk factors.

RESULTS: Cigarette smoking and snuff (tobacco powder with additives) intake were significantly associated with differentiated NPC but not with undifferentiated carcinoma (UCNT), which is the major histological type of NPC in these populations. As demonstrated by a stratified permutation test and by conditional logistic regression, marijuana smoking significantly elevated NPC risk independently of cigarette smoking, suggesting dissimilar carcinogenic mechanisms between cannabis and tobacco. Domestic cooking fumes intake by using kanoun (compact charcoal oven) during childhood increased NPC risk, whereas exposure during adulthood had less effect. Neither alcohol nor shisha (water pipe) was associated with risk.

CONCLUSION: Tobacco, cannabis and domestic cooking fumes intake are risk factors for NPC in western North Africa.

Arch Toxicol. 2009 Oct 16.  

Association of XPD/ERCC2 G ( 23591 ) A and A ( 35931 ) C polymorphisms with skin lesion prevalence in a multiethnic, arseniasis-hyperendemic village exposed to indoor combustion of high arsenic coal.

Lin GF, Du H, Chen JG, Lu HC, Guo WC, Golka K, Shen JH. Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 300 Fenglin Road, 200032, Shanghai, China.

More than 2,000 arsenic-related skin lesions (as at 2002) in a few villages of China’s Southwest Guizhou Autonomous Prefecture represent a unique case of endemic arseniasis related with indoor combustion of high-arsenic coal. The skin lesion prevalence was significantly higher in ethnic Han villagers than in ethnic Hmong villagers.

This study was focused on a possible involvement of XPD/ERCC2 G ( 23591 ) A and A ( 35931 ) C polymorphisms in risk modulation of skin lesions and in the body burden of As in this unique case of As exposure. G ( 23591 ) A and A ( 35931 ) C were genotyped by a PCR-based procedure.  Total As contents in hair and urine samples as well as environmental samples of the homes of the two ethnic clans were analysed.  A significant higher presentation of A/A ( 35931 ) (homozygous wild) genotype in both clans was found in skin lesion patients, compared with their asymptomatic fellow villagers (67.1 vs. 46.3%, OR 2.36, 95% CI 1.35-4.14, P = 0.002).

Interestingly, the population frequencies of the A/A ( 35931 ) genotype did not show significant differences between ethnic Han villagers and their Hmong neighbours (47.1 vs. 45.5%).  Very low frequencies of homozygous and heterozygous variant genotypes of G ( 23591 ) A were recorded in the residents in target village. G/A ( 23591 ) and A/A ( 23591 ) were detected only in 3.2% (8/244) and 0.8% (2/244) of the villagers, respectively.  The polymorphic status at the locus of A ( 35931 ) C might modulate the risk for arsenic-related skin lesions in the investigated groups.

Environ Sci Technol.  2009 Aug 1; 43(15):5586-91.

Deployment of coal briquettes and improved stoves: possibly an option for both environment and climate.

Zhi G, Peng C, Chen Y, Liu D, Sheng G, Fu J. Key Laboratory for Atmospheric Chemistry, Centre for Atmosphere Watch & Services of CMA, Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences, Beijing 100081, China.

The use of coal briquettes and improved stoves by Chinese households has been encouraged by the government as a means of reducing air pollution and health impacts.  In this study we have shown that these two improvements also relate to climate change.  Our experimental measurements indicate that if all coal were burned as briquettes in improved stoves, particulate matter (PM), organic carbon (OC), and black carbon (BC) could be annually reduced by 63 +/- 12%, 61 +/- 10%, and 98 +/- 1.7%, respectively.

Also, the ratio of BC to OC (BC/OC) could be reduced by about 97%, from 0.49 to 0.016, which would make the primary emissions of household coal combustion more optically scattering.  Therefore, it is suggested that the government consider the possibility of: (i) phasing out direct burning of bituminous raw-coal-chunks in households; (ii) phasing out simple stoves in households; and, (iii) financially supporting the research, production, and popularization of improved stoves and efficient coal briquettes.

These actions may have considerable environmental benefits by reducing emissions and mitigating some of the impacts of household coal burning on the climate. International cooperation is required both technologically and financially to accelerate the emission reduction in the world.

BBC World Challenge 2009 – Five finalists for the BBC World Challenge 2009 address issues of household energy.

 Now in its fifth year, World Challenge 2009 is a global competition aimed at finding projects or small businesses from around the world that have shown enterprise and innovation at a grass roots level. 

Some of the finalists addressing household energy initiatives are:

For more information see: http://www.theworldchallenge.co.uk

New Delhi October 16, 2009 – The government today launched an ambitious scheme to expand coverage of domestic cooking gas to rural areas, and plans to give poor people LPG stoves free of cost to bring at least three-fourth of the population under the LPG coverage.  

The Rajiv Gandhi Gramin LPG Vitrak scheme aims at setting up small size LPG distribution agencies in areas, which till now were not considered as economically viable, Petroleum Minister Murli Deora told reporters after launching the scheme. The scheme would, however, require the consumers to buy LPG cylinders from the agencies and transport themselves as against the present model of distributors doing a home delivery.

Small LPG distributorship would be set up in rural areas with a potential of selling 600 refills a month as against the present convention that requires an agency in place with no less than 3,000 cylinder sales. Deora said the scheme is initially being launched in eight states of Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, West Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and Orissa, covering over 1,200 locations where the reach of LPG is very low.  “Home delivery of the cylinders will add to the cost of the distributor and will make the whole scheme economically unviable given the low sales,” IOC Chairman S Behuria said. Minister of State for Petroleum and Natural Gas Jitin Prasada said it is proposed that oil firms utilise 15 per cent of their CSR funds to give free LPG stoves to BPL families.

Source – http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/govt-launches-drive-to-provide-lpg-to-75population/76151/on

Cutting Non-CO2 Pollutants Can Delay Abrupt Climate Change, Solve ‘Fast Half’ of Climate Problem

Oct. 12, 2009/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Reducing non-CO2 climate change agents such as black carbon soot, tropospheric ozone, and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), as well as expanding bio-sequestration through biochar production, can forestall fast approaching abrupt climate changes, according to Nobel Laureate Dr. Mario Molina and co-authors in a paper published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

The paper’s authors said that pursuing these solutions could change the character of the United Nations climate change conference taking place this December in Copenhagen. “Cutting HFCs, black carbon, tropospheric ozone, and methane can buy us about 40 years before we approach the dangerous threshold of 2 degrees Celsius warming,” said co-author Professor Veerabhadran Ramanathan, a Distinguished Professor of Climate and Atmospheric Sciences at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego. “By targeting these short-term climate forcers, we can make a down payment on climate and provide momentum going into the December negotiations in Copenhagen,” said co-author Durwood Zaelke, President of the Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development. “The Obama Administration and other key governments need to take up the fast-action climate agenda before it is too late.”

HFCs are powerful greenhouse gases originally developed as substitutes for ozone-depleting chemicals. They are poised to become a larger and larger part of the climate problem over the next few decades. HFCs are used primarily as refrigerants and in making insulating foam, and emissions are expected to grow dramatically due to increased demand for air conditioning in developing countries. By 2050, HFC emissions could equal up to 19 percent of global CO2 emissions under business-as-usual scenarios. The good news, the paper points out, is that a binding legal agreement exists that can cut HFCs now — the Montreal Protocol ozone treaty — and that many alternatives to HFCs have already been developed and are on the shelf waiting for the right regulatory incentive from the Montreal Protocol to be deployed. “The Montreal Protocol has already delayed climate change by seven to 12 years, and put the ozone layer on the path to recovery later this century,” said Dr. Mario Molina, recipient of the Nobel Prize in chemistry for his path-breaking work in 1974 that sounded the alarm on ozone-depleting CFCs. “The Montreal Protocol is critical for avoiding abrupt climate change. We have to take advantage of the proven ability of this legally binding treaty to quickly phase down HFCs.” The small island nations of Micronesia and Mauritius submitted a joint proposal in April to phase down production and consumption of HFCs under the Montreal Protocol. North American leaders followed suit with their own joint proposal, which builds on the islands’ submission. The Montreal Protocol is an essential strategy for the island nations to achieve fast mitigation to slow sea-level rise that is already starting to destroy their countries. “We must consider all viable strategies that will help protect vulnerable island nations, in particular, those strategies that have a track record of success, such as the Montreal Protocol,” said Ambassador Masao Nakayama, Permanent Representative of the Federated States of Micronesia to the United Nations. Although the Kyoto Protocol currently addresses emissions of HFCs, it does not address production and consumption.  A neglected fast-action strategy presented in the paper is reducing black carbon soot, an aerosol produced largely from the incomplete combustion of diesel fuels and biofuels, and from biomass burning. It is now considered to be the second or third largest contributor to climate change. Black carbon is responsible for almost 50 percent of the 1.9 degrees Celsius increase in warming of the Arctic since 1890 as well as significant melting of the Himalaya-Tibetan glaciers that feed the major rivers of Asia, providing fresh water to billions of people.

Researchers consider black carbon an ideal target for achieving quick mitigation because it only remains in the atmosphere a few days to a few weeks and can be reduced by expanding the use of diesel particulate filters for vehicles and clean-burning or solar cookstoves to replace those burning dung and wood. With indoor air pollution killing 1.6 million people a year, global action to cut soot emissions would reap major benefits for both public health and climate. “If we reduce black carbon emissions worldwide by 50 percent by fully deploying all available emissions-control technologies, we could delay the warming effects of CO2 by one to two decades and at the same time greatly improve the health of those living in heavily polluted regions,” said Dr. Ramanathan.

Like black carbon, ground level or tropospheric ozone doubles as a major climate forcer and health hazard. It also lowers crop yields. A recent study reported that ozone’s damage to crop yields in 2000 resulted in an economic loss of up to $26 billion annually. It is formed by “ozone precursor” gases such as carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, methane, and other hydrocarbons, many of which can be reduced by improving the efficiency of industrial combustion processes. Reducing tropospheric ozone by 50 percent could buy another decade’s worth of time for countries to start making substantial cuts in CO2. Biochar is one of the few promising “carbon-negative” strategies that can drawdown existing concentrations of CO2. The fine-grained charcoal product is a stable form of carbon that can be plowed into soil where it remains for hundreds to thousands of years, also serving as a natural fertilizer. Biochar comes from cooking biomass waste at low temperatures with minimal oxygen — a process called pyrolisis. “The other fast-action strategies can quickly mitigate emissions, but to back away from the cliff of abrupt climate change, we need biochar,” said Zaelke. Although most of the world is focused on CO2 in the months leading up to Copenhagen, the authors of the paper hope that policymakers will recognize the advantages of implementing these fast-action strategies to complement reductions in CO2. “These fast-action strategies will support the long-term CO2 solution by stopping near-term climate change with non-CO2 solutions,” said Dr. Stephen Andersen. “This will bring momentum to those negotiating the international agreement and the U.S. legislation.”

The paper is part of a “Tipping elements in Earth systems” special feature to be published in PNAS later this year. “Cutting CO2 emissions is essential, but it won’t produce cooling fast enough to avoid passing tipping points for abrupt climate change,” said Zaelke. “With the world already committed to more than 2 degrees Celsius of warming, we need these fast-action strategies to put the brakes on climate change, and in the case of biochar, put us in reverse by reducing existing atmospheric concentrations of CO2.” “We intend our paper as a call to action,” said co-author K. Madhava Sarma of the Montreal Protocol’s Technology and Economic Assessment Panel.

Title: Reducing abrupt climate change risk using the Montreal Protocol and other regulatory actions to complement cuts in CO2 emissions. Authors: Mario Molina, Durwood Zaelke, K. Madhava Sarma, Stephen O. Andersen, Veerabhadran Ramanathan and Donald Kaniaru Available online:  http://www.pnas.org/content/early/recent

Source – http://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS13623+13-Oct-2009+PRN20091013

 September 25- 29th, PCIA Partners in Latin America gathered for the first time in La Paz, Bolivia to share experiences and organize future meetings.

The meeting was sponsored by GTZ Bolivia and coordinated by Mariana Butron. Eighteen representatives from seven projects and six countries came together. Meeting topics included: implementation strategies across the region; the importance of country-based stove testing labs to certify stove performance; and a presentation by Dr. Roberto Achinelli of results from an evaluation of IAP health effects in Peru. The group attended the inauguration of a new stove testing center in Bolivia and participated in site visits and cultural activities as well.

Meeting presentations – http://www.pciaonline.org/node/1058

Key facts

  • Radon is the second most important cause of lung cancer in many countries.
  • Radon is estimated to cause between 3% and 14% of all lung cancers, depending on the average radon level in a country.
  • Radon is much more likely to cause lung cancer in people who smoke, and is the primary cause of lung cancer among non-smokers.
  • Radon-induced lung cancers are mainly caused by low and moderate rather than by high radon concentrations, because of the large number of people exposed to indoor radon in homes with such low concentrations.
  • The lower the radon concentration in a home, the lower the risk as there is no known threshold below which radon exposures carries no risk.

Health effects of radon

In many countries, radon is the second most important cause of lung cancer after smoking. The proportion of lung cancers attributable to radon is estimated to range from 3 to 14%.

Significant health effects have been seen in uranium miners who are exposed to high levels of radon. However, studies in Europe, North America and China have confirmed that lower concentrations of radon – such as those found in homes – also confer health risks and contribute substantially to the occurrence of lung cancers worldwide [1, 2, 3].

The risk of lung cancer increases by 16% per 100 Bq/m3 increase in radon concentration. The dose-response relation is linear – i.e. the risk of lung cancer increases proportionally with increasing radon exposure. Radon is much more likely to cause lung cancer in people who smoke.

Link to complete Fact Sheet – http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs291/en/index.html

Study suggests improved biomass stove reduces lung function decline compared with an open fire

MONDAY, Sept. 28 (HealthDay News) — In rural Mexican women, use of an improved wood-burning stove is associated with better respiratory function compared to a traditional open fire, according to a study in the Oct. 1 issue of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

Isabelle Romieu, M.D., from the National Institute of Public Health in Cuernavaca, Mexico, and colleagues compared lung function in 552 rural Mexican women randomly assigned to the Patsari stove (an improved biomass stove) or their traditional open fire.

Noting that adherence to the Patsari stove was only 50 percent, the researchers found that women using the stove had a significantly lower risk of respiratory symptoms (relative risks, 0.77 for cough and 0.29 for wheezing) after adjusting for possible confounding factors. Improvements were also noted for other respiratory symptoms, eye discomfort, headache, and back pain. After one year of follow-up, the Patsari stove was also associated with a smaller decline in lung function compared to the open fire.

Now is a critical point in time to reduce indoor air pollution in the developing world as large-scale stove intervention programs are being implemented or considered around the world,” writes the author of an accompanying editorial. “This timely article from Romieu and colleagues helps to highlight both the tremendous potential of these programs in the developing world to improve health and quality of life and the great need for continued research to help us understand how to best develop and implement these programs.”

Practical Action. 2009. Renewable Energy Practices in Nepal: Cookstove Programs. (pdf, full-text)

This is a very useful directory of NGOs, manufacturers, etc. involved in cookstove programs in Nepal.