LONDON — Diesel fumes cause cancer, the World Health Organization's cancer agency declared Tuesday, a ruling it said could make exhaust as important a public health threat as secondhand smoke.
The risk of getting cancer from diesel fumes is small, but since so many people breathe in the fumes in some way, the science panel said raising the status of diesel exhaust to carcinogen from "probable carcinogen" was an important shift.
Since so many people are exposed to exhaust, Straif said there could be many cases of lung cancer connected to the contaminant. He said the fumes affected groups including pedestrians on the street, ship passengers and crew, railroad workers, truck drivers, mechanics, miners and people operating heavy machinery.
The new classification followed a weeklong discussion in Lyon, France, by an expert panel organized by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. The panel's decision stands as the ruling for the IARC, the cancer arm of the World Health Organization.
The last time the agency considered the status of diesel exhaust was in 1989, when it was labeled a "probable" carcinogen. Reclassifying diesel exhaust as carcinogenic puts it into the same category as other known hazards such as asbestos, alcohol and ultraviolet radiation.
The U.S. government, however, still classifies diesel exhaust as a likely carcinogen. Experts said new diesel engines spew out fewer fumes but further studies are needed to assess any potential dangers. (AP/T05/aph)
READ ALSO:
24 Foreigners hurt in clashes at Euro 2012
AirAsia Close to Placing Airbus Order as It Seeks New Partners
DELL to pay first DIVIDEND in third quarter
Panca Global Partners with BEI, Bisnis Indonesia to launch PG Indeks BISNIS-27
LONG PRISON sentences for ex-China FOOTBALL BOSSES
George Washington's constitution to be auctioned
MOST VISITED CHANNEL: CURRENT ISSUE, ECONOMY, BUSINESS, MARKET & CORPORATE, CONSUMER
Showing 0 - 0 of 0 comments