New Report: Jackson’s Air Quality Worsens; Residents Exposed to More Ozone Smog and Particle Pollution

American Lung Association’s 26th annual “State of the Air” report highlights air quality and impacts on public health in Jackson metro area and across nation

According to the American Lung Association’s “State of the Air” report, released today, air quality in the Jackson metro area has worsened. Residents are being exposed to more unhealthy ozone smog and year-round levels of particle pollution. Additionally, the report found that nearly half of the U.S. population live in areas with unhealthy levels of air pollution. Extreme heat and wildfires contributed to worsening air quality in much of the country.

The Lung Association’s 26th annual “State of the Air” report grades exposure to unhealthy levels of ozone pollution, also known as “smog,” and particle pollution, also known as “soot,” over a three-year period (2021-2023). Findings for the Jackson metro area include:

  • Ground-level Ozone Pollution:
    • Number of Unhealthy Days per Year: 0.7 days (0 days in 2024 report)
    • Grade: B (A in 2024 report)
    • National Ranking: 149th worst out of 228 (tied for 1st cleanest in 2024 report)
  • Short-Term Spikes in Particle Pollution:
    • Number of Unhealthy Days Per Year: 0.7 days (0.7 days in 2024 report)
    • Grade: B (C in 2024 report)
    • National Ranking: 156th worst out of 223 (85th worst in 2024 report)
  • Year-Round Average Level of Particle Pollution:
    • Grade: Failing grade, pollution levels above the federal standard (failing grade in 2024 report)
    • National Ranking: 54th worst out of 204 (29th worst in 2024 report)

Ozone and particle pollution are widespread and can impact anyone’s health. Both pollutants can cause premature death and other serious health effects such as asthma attacks, heart attacks and strokes, preterm births and impaired cognitive functioning later in life. Particle pollution can also cause lung cancer.

“Unfortunately, too many people in the Jackson metro area are living with unhealthy levels of ozone and particle pollution. This air pollution is a threat to human health at every stage of life—increasing the risk of premature birth and low birth weight in babies to causing or worsening lung and heart disease to shortening lives,” said Calandra Davis, Mississippi director of advocacy at the Lung Association. “We urge Mississippi policymakers to take action to improve our air quality, including implementing more frequent and transparent testing, monitoring, and reporting of emissions. We are calling on everyone to support the incredibly important work of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Without EPA staff and programs, Mississippians won’t know what’s in the air they’re breathing, and efforts to clean up air pollution will be undone.”

In addition to the Jackson metro area, other notable findings across Mississippi include:

  • Ozone smog in the Gulfport-Biloxi metro area worsened from a “B” to a “C” grade. However, for third year in a row, it listed among the nation's cleanest for daily particle pollution. Year-round particle pollution improved to the area’s second-best ever.
  • After seven reports listing the Tupelo metro area among the nation's cleanest with straight “A's” for ozone smog, its grade worsened to a “B.”

The “State of the Air” report relies on data from air quality monitors managed by state, local and Tribal air pollution control authorities in counties across the U.S. In Mississippi, only 10 out of 82 counties could be graded for at least one measure of air quality. This underscores the need for more monitors and access to air quality data so that people and communities can take measures to safeguard their health. 

On a national level, the “State of the Air” report found that 156 million people in the U.S. (46%) live in an area that received a failing grade for at least one measure of air pollution. 42.5 million people live in areas with failing grades for all three measures. The report also found that a person of color in the U.S. is more than twice as likely as a white individual to live in a community with a failing grade on all three pollution measures. Notably, Hispanic individuals are nearly three times as likely as white individuals to live in a community with three failing grades.

The Lung Association is calling on everyone to support the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. EPA is essential to protecting people’s health from ozone and particle pollution. Join the American Lung Association in advocating to protect EPA’s expert staff and lifesaving programs. See the full report results and take action at Lung.org/sota.

For more information, contact:

Victoria O'Neill
(312) 273-5890
victoria.oneill@lung.org

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