To be fair, this is all irrelevent. The reason you are up in arms strad is for two reasons:
1. Cancer is a scary buzzword.
2. You don't understand relative risk.
It is given the same relative risk as passive smoking. About 25%ish relative risk increase (sources place the relative increase from 20-30%, so I took the average) on non smokers. In the US non smokers account for about 20% of cases, 80% being smokers. Per year the incidence of about 70 cases of lung cancer per 100,000.
Non smokers: 70*.2 /100000 = 14/100,000.
Absolute increase due to diesel exhausts, assuming the same relative risk as passive smoking.
14*1.25 = 17.5 / 100,000.
So overall an increase of 3.5 people per 100,000 in a given year will develop cancer as a result of diesel fumes.
In the grand scheme of things this isn't really a large risk.
Notes:
This is not a lifetime risk.
Risk factor is highly dependent on concentration and exposure.
This is not terminal cases, only incidence.
This is obviously a very wooly bringing together of many different sources of information, the numbers vary by a fair margin depending on study. As I am not inclined to perform a more rigourous analysis the exact numbers should be taken with a pinch of salt. The orders of magnitude should be about right though.
The fact is exhaust gases are full of nasty, nasty ---. And things that will kill you much quicker than waiting to get cancer.
CO, NO2 for starters.
Food for thought:
Considering that the whole world is universally complaining about fuel prices (and an increasingly difficult production), how you do propose you replace all the diesel engines? What with? Who's going to pay? Compare this with the negligable increase in risk of cancer.
Also please note that new petrol engines that are running direct injection also produce PM, but this is needed to reach efficiency targets. So do you wish to ban the petrol engine too?
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/article ... =pmcentrez
Study of PM of a smoldering cig vs a 2L idling diesel engine.