Wildfire Smoke, the Clean Air Act, and the Exceptional Events Rule: Implications and Policy Alternatives

A new paper, published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology, shows that this Exceptional Events Rule is allowing a substantial number of areas to meet air quality standards, despite increasingly poor air quality due to smoke.

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Date

Feb. 4, 2025

Publication

Journal Article in Environmental Science & Technology

Reading time

1 minute

Abstract

In recent years, increasing wildfire activity in the western United States and Canada has driven declining air quality in some regions of the United States. Under the US Environmental Protection Agency’s Exceptional Events Rule, states are allowed to exempt daily pollution monitor readings impacted by wildfire smoke from determinations of compliance with Clean Air Act air quality standards. As a result, wildfire smoke is leading to a growing divergence between actual and regulatory air quality. This paper reviews treatment of wildfire smoke under the Clean Air Act and the Exceptional Events Rule. It presents quantitative evidence on the effect of the rule on fulfillment of air quality standards, and an analysis of the degree to which smoke that currently leads to air quality violations is driven by out-of-state fires and fires on federal lands. We suggest a modification to the Exceptional Events Rule under which wildfire emissions would be excluded from air quality regulations only if states adopt government-defined best fire management policies, and we discuss the legal and practical feasibility of such a change.

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