Nicholas L. Lam
University of California, Berkeley
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Publication
Featured researches published by Nicholas L. Lam.
Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health-part B-critical Reviews | 2012
Nicholas L. Lam; Kirk R. Smith; Alison Gauthier; Michael N. Bates
Kerosene has been an important household fuel since the mid-19th century. In developed countries its use has greatly declined because of electrification. However, in developing countries, kerosene use for cooking and lighting remains widespread. This review focuses on household kerosene uses, mainly in developing countries, their associated emissions, and their hazards. Kerosene is often advocated as a cleaner alternative to solid fuels, biomass and coal, for cooking, and kerosene lamps are frequently used when electricity is unavailable. Globally, an estimated 500 million households still use fuels, particularly kerosene, for lighting. However, there are few studies, study designs and quality are varied, and results are inconsistent. Well-documented kerosene hazards are poisonings, fires, and explosions. Less investigated are exposures to and risks from kerosenes combustion products. Some kerosene-using devices emit substantial amounts of fine particulates, carbon monoxide (CO), nitric oxides (NOx), and sulfur dioxide (SO2). Studies of kerosene used for cooking or lighting provide some evidence that emissions may impair lung function and increase infectious illness (including tuberculosis), asthma, and cancer risks. However, there are few study designs, quality is varied, and results are inconsistent. Considering the widespread use in the developing world of kerosene, the scarcity of adequate epidemiologic investigations, the potential for harm, and the implications for national energy policies, researchers are strongly encouraged to consider collecting data on household kerosene uses in studies of health in developing countries. Given the potential risks of kerosene, policymakers may consider alternatives to kerosene subsidies, such as shifting support to cleaner technologies for lighting and cooking.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2012
Nicholas L. Lam; Yanju Chen; Cheryl Weyant; Chandra Venkataraman; Pankaj Sadavarte; Michael Johnson; Kirk R. Smith; Benjamin T. Brem; Joseph Arineitwe; Justin Ellis; Tami C. Bond
Kerosene-fueled wick lamps used in millions of developing-country households are a significant but overlooked source of black carbon (BC) emissions. We present new laboratory and field measurements showing that 7-9% of kerosene consumed by widely used simple wick lamps is converted to carbonaceous particulate matter that is nearly pure BC. These high emission factors increase previous BC emission estimates from kerosene by 20-fold, to 270 Gg/year (90% uncertainty bounds: 110, 590 Gg/year). Aerosol climate forcing on atmosphere and snow from this source is estimated at 22 mW/m² (8, 48 mW/m²), or 7% of BC forcing by all other energy-related sources. Kerosene lamps have affordable alternatives that pose few clear adoption barriers and would provide immediate benefit to user welfare. The net effect on climate is definitively positive forcing as coemitted organic carbon is low. No other major BC source has such readily available alternatives, definitive climate forcing effects, and cobenefits. Replacement of kerosene-fueled wick lamps deserves strong consideration for programs that target short-lived climate forcers.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2015
Ralph K. Rosenbaum; Arjen Meijer; Evangelia Demou; Stefanie Hellweg; Olivier Jolliet; Nicholas L. Lam; Manuele Margni; Thomas E. McKone
Human exposure to indoor pollutant concentrations is receiving increasing interest in Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). We address this issue by incorporating an indoor compartment into the USEtox model, as well as by providing recommended parameter values for households in four different regions of the world differing geographically, economically, and socially. With these parameter values, intake fractions and comparative toxicity potentials for indoor emissions of dwellings for different air tightness levels were calculated. The resulting intake fractions for indoor exposure vary by 2 orders of magnitude, due to the variability of ventilation rate, building occupation, and volume. To compare health impacts as a result of indoor exposure with those from outdoor exposure, the indoor exposure characterization factors determined with the modified USEtox model were applied in a case study on cooking in non-OECD countries. This study demonstrates the appropriateness and significance of integrating indoor environments into LCA, which ensures a more holistic account of all exposure environments and allows for a better accountability of health impacts. The model, intake fractions, and characterization factors are made available for use in standard LCA studies via www.usetox.org and in standard LCA software.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2009
Rufus Edwards; Nicholas L. Lam; L. Zhang; Michael Johnson; Michael T. Kleinman
Lead-based paint remains a pervasive problem in U.S. cities, and an increasing problem in the developing world where it is still manufactured and used. Little attention has focused on the factors that increase the release of lead pigment granules from painted surfaces. Nitrogen dioxide (NO(2)) and ozone (O(3)) from transportation emissions in urban environments have the potential to react with and remove polymeric binders in paint, making pigment granules more available for subsequent transfer to hands on contact, or deposition in housedust. Here we show that exposure to NO(2) and O(3) increased the lead in wipe samples of stainless steel surfaces painted with alkyd low gloss solvent lead-based paint by 296% +/- 101 (or 0.24 microg/cm(2)) and 37% +/- 21 (or 0.025 microg/cm(2)), respectively, with corresponding changes in surface morphology indicated by reflectometry and scanning electron microscopy. Lead release from unexposed low gloss acrylic household paints was 40 times greater than comparable solvent based paints. Given that lead-based paint is still manufactured and used in many urban areas of the developing world where O(3) concentrations currently exceed historic U.S. concentrations, the interaction of air pollution with lead painted indoor surfaces may pose greater exposure risks for lead poisoning in children than previously anticipated.
Mutagenesis | 2014
Alexandra S. Long; Christine L. Lemieux; Paul Yousefi; Ilse Ruiz-Mercado; Nicholas L. Lam; Carolina Romero Orellana; Paul A. White; Kirk R. Smith; Nina Holland
In Central America, the traditional temazcales or wood-fired steam baths, commonly used by many Native American populations, are often heated by wood fires with little ventilation, and this use results in high wood smoke exposure. Urinary mutagenicity has been previously employed as a non-invasive biomarker of human exposure to combustion emissions. This study examined the urinary mutagenicity in 19 indigenous Mayan families from the highlands of Guatemala who regularly use temazcales (N = 32), as well as control (unexposed) individuals from the same population (N = 9). Urine samples collected before and after temazcal exposure were enzymatically deconjugated and extracted using solid-phase extraction. The creatinine-adjusted mutagenic potency of urine extracts was assessed using the plate-incorporation version of the Salmonella mutagenicity assay with strain YG1041 in the presence of exogenous metabolic activation. The post-exposure mutagenic potency of urine extracts were, on average, 1.7-fold higher than pre-exposure samples (P < 0.005) and also significantly more mutagenic than the control samples (P < 0.05). Exhaled carbon monoxide (CO) was ~10 times higher following temazcal use (P < 0.0001), and both CO level and time spent in temazcal were positively associated with urinary mutagenic potency (i.e. P < 0.0001 and P = 0.01, respectively). Thus, the wood smoke exposure associated with temazcal use contributes to increased excretion of conjugated mutagenic metabolites. Moreover, urinary mutagenic potency is correlated with other metrics of exposure (i.e. exhaled CO, duration of exposure). Since urinary mutagenicity is a biomarker associated with genetic damage, temazcal use may therefore be expected to contribute to an increased risk of DNA damage and mutation, effects associated with the initiation of cancer.
Sensors | 2017
Ajay Pillarisetti; Tracy Allen; Ilse Ruiz-Mercado; Rufus Edwards; Zohir Chowdhury; Charity Garland; L. Hill; Michael P. Johnson; Charles D. Litton; Nicholas L. Lam; David Pennise; Kirk R. Smith
Over the last 20 years, the Kirk R. Smith research group at the University of California Berkeley—in collaboration with Electronically Monitored Ecosystems, Berkeley Air Monitoring Group, and other academic institutions—has developed a suite of relatively inexpensive, rugged, battery-operated, microchip-based devices to quantify parameters related to household air pollution. These devices include two generations of particle monitors; data-logging temperature sensors to assess time of use of household energy devices; a time-activity monitoring system using ultrasound; and a CO2-based tracer-decay system to assess ventilation rates. Development of each system involved numerous iterations of custom hardware, software, and data processing and visualization routines along with both lab and field validation. The devices have been used in hundreds of studies globally and have greatly enhanced our understanding of heterogeneous household air pollution (HAP) concentrations and exposures and factors influencing them.
Energy for Sustainable Development | 2010
Chandra Venkataraman; Ambuj Sagar; G. Habib; Nicholas L. Lam; Kirk R. Smith
Energy for Sustainable Development | 2013
Michael Johnson; Verónica Pilco; Rafael Torres; Sandeep Joshi; Rajeev M. Shrestha; Mahesh Yagnaraman; Nicholas L. Lam; John Mitchell; Eduardo Canuz; David Pennise
Environmental Research Letters | 2016
Nicholas L. Lam; Shonali Pachauri; Pallav Purohit; Yu Nagai; Michael N. Bates; Colin Cameron; Kirk R. Smith
Greenhouse Gas Strategies in a Changing Climate Conference 2011 | 2011
Michael Johnson; Tami C. Bond; Nicholas L. Lam; Cheryl Weyant; Yanju Chen; Justin Ellis; Vijay Modi; Sandeep Joshi; Mahesh Yagnaraman; David Pennise