MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff Maurice Williams filed this action under the Eighth Amendment, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking damages related to his alleged exposure to secondhand smoke while he was confined at the District of Columbia Department of Corrections Central Detention Facility (“D.C. Jail”). 1 Defendants moved for summary judgment, Mr. Williams opposed, and the Court held a hearing on December 3, 2007. After careful consideration, the Court finds that Mr. Williams lacks standing to bring this action. Therefore, the Court will dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
*122 I. FACTS
In his Amended Complaint, Mr. Williams alleges that between 2001 and 2003, during a twelve and one-half month period while he was incarcerated at the D.C. Jail, 2 he was assigned to Southwest Unit 2. Am. Compl. ¶ 3. He asserts that smoking was permitted in every cellblock to which he was assigned and that every cell mate he had was a chain smoker. Pl.’s Opp., Ex. 3 at 78, 83-84, & 86-87. According to Mr. Williams, a significant number of the prisoners at the D.C. Jail smoked tobacco, as did members of the Jail staff. Id. at 86-86; Pl.’s Opp., Ex. 10 at 63. The Jail had a poor ventilation system with very little or any air movement in the cells, and in Mr. Williams’s unit there were no windows or doors that could be opened to remove the tobacco smoke. Am. Compl. ¶ 5; PL’s Opp., Ex. 7 at 11-12; PL’s Opp., Ex. 8 at 13-15. In addition, his cellmate for some period smoked five packs of cigarettes a day and kept a homemade toilet paper wick burning at all times for the purpose of lighting cigarettes. Am. Compl. ¶ 5. Due to the constant exposure to tobacco smoke, Mr. Williams experienced nausea and nosebleeds. Id. Mr. Williams alleges that his health is at great risk due to the environmental tobacco smoke (“ETS”). While the D.C. Department of Corrections (“DOC”) had adopted a non-smoking policy at the Jail in May 1992, see Defs.’ Mem., Ex. 1, Mr. Williams contends that it was not enforced.
Mr. Williams alleges that he filed a number of grievances about the smoking problem with Jail personnel, but they made no effort to provide a nonsmoking environment, establish a designated smoking area, or otherwise resolve the issue. PL’s Opp., Ex. 3 at 121-32. Jail officials denied Mr. Williams’s request to be transferred to a non-smoking block. Id. at 123-30. The DOC’s records indicate that Mr. Williams never filed a grievance complaining of second-hand smoke. Defs.’ Mem., Ex. 6; PL’s Opp., Ex. 3 at 130-135. Mr. Williams alleges that there are no records of his smoking grievances because they were destroyed by staff at the Jail. PL’s Opp., Ex. 3 at 130.
Mr. Williams contends that his health is at great risk due to ETS. In support of his claim, he relies on an analysis of the D.C. Jail’s conditions by James L. Repace, a biophysicist and secondhand smoke consultant specializing in issues of indoor air pollution from ETS. PL’s Opp., Ex. 6. Mr. Repace previously has been qualified as an expert in a number of cases related to ETS. Id. Mr. Repace calculated the “uniformly diluted respirable particle air pollution concentration from secondhand smoke (SHS-RSP)” present in the D.C. Jail during the time of Mr. Williams’s incarceration, using a four-month period from May 2, 2002 to August 2, 2002 as a “representative sample of conditions in the prison throughout the period of plaintiffs’ incarceration.” PL’s Opp., Ex. 5 at 3, 6. Mr. Repaee’s analysis has two main types of measurement, an air exchange rate and smoker density. Mr. Repace based the air exchange rate on the fact that smoking was permitted in 16 blocks of the Jail, that the Jail lacked documentation that the air-conditioning system was monitored, and that some cells had low or no air flow. Id. at 4-5. Mr. Repace calculated the smoker density using the dimensions of the Jail, the number of inmates, the number of cigarettes and cigars sold by the Jail canteen in 2002, the rate of ventilation, and an estimate of the number of smokers among the inmate population, extrapolated from other jail studies. Id. He concluded that the level of ETS to which Mr. Williams *123 was exposed was in the “Very Hazardous” range of the Federal Air Quality Index. Id. at 7 & 18. Furthermore, Mr. Repace opines that Mr. Williams’s exposure to second-hand smoke has increased his risk of developing heart disease, lung cancer, asthma, and nasal sinus cancer:
6. The calculated dose of SHS [secondhand smoke] to which the plaintiffs’ 3 were exposed in the DC Jail was 38 times higher than for adult males in U.S. Population as recently as 2002. The plaintiffs’ calculated dose exceeds the 95th percentile of adult male SHS exposure in 2001-2002.
7. The plaintiffs’ calculated serum coti-nine level reflects a SHS exposure which has increased their risk of developing heart disease by a calculated 55% as a result of their exposure to SHS in the DC Jail for a 1 year period.
8. The SHS exposure of the plaintiffs is 38 times the lung cancer risk based on the SHS exposure level for the average adult U.S. male for 1 year’s exposure. This increase in risk will decline very slowly, taking 40 years to return to normal.
9. The plaintiffs have been put at risk for both nasal sinus cancer and asthma induction, although the amount is difficult to quantify.
10.These conclusions are reached to [sic] within a reasonable degree of scientific certainty.
Id. at 18. Mr. Williams claims that Defendants’ conduct constituted deliberate indifference to the risk to his health. Am. Compl. ¶ 7.
Mr. Williams brought this suit against the District of Columbia and against the following former employees of the DOC, in their individual capacities: Odie Washington, Director of the DOC; James Anthony, Assistant Director of the DOC; Marvin L. Brown, Deputy Director for Operations at the D.C. Jail; and Judy Lyons, Deputy Warden for Support Services at the D.C. Jail. Mr. Williams seeks compensatory and punitive damages, claiming that his Eighth Amendment rights were violated when Defendants, with deliberate indifference, exposed him to levels of ETS that posed an unreasonable risk of serious damage to his future health. 4 Defendants have filed a motion for summary judgment and Mr. Williams opposes. The Court held a hearing on this matter on December 3, 2007. Upon consideration of the parties’ arguments and *124 the pleadings, the Court has determined that it lacks jurisdiction because Mr. Williams does not have standing to bring this suit.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction and the law presumes that “a cause lies outside this limited jurisdiction.”
Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies under the PLRA
Defendants contend that Mr. Williams failed to exhaust his administrative remedies. 5 The Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”) provides that:
No action shall be brought with respect to prison conditions under section 1983 of this title, or any other Federal law, by a prisoner confined to any jail, prison, or other correctional facility until such administrative remedies as are available are exhausted.
42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). The exhaustion requirement of § 1997e(a) is mandatory and “applies to all prisoners seeking redress for prison circumstances or occurrences.”
Porter v. Nussle,
B. PLRA Requires a Physical Injury
Defendants contend that this suit is barred under the PLRA. That law provides, “[n]o Federal civil action may be brought by a prisoner confined in a ... prison ... for mental or emotional injury
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suffered in custody without a prior showing of physical injury.” 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(e). In the absence of physical injury, a claim for compensatory damages for mental or emotional injury is precluded by § 1997e(e).
Davis v. District of Columbia,
C. Standing
As a matter of basic constitutional law, federal courts are limited to deciding cases and controversies, and the issue of standing is one feature of such limitation.
Am. Legal Found. v. FCC,
To have Article III standing, a plaintiff must establish: “(1) [he] has suffered an ‘injury in fact’ that is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical; (2) the injury is fairly traceable to the challenged action of the defendant; and (3) it is likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision.”
Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs.,
Mr. Williams’s claim for damages for the alleged increased risk of to his health is insufficient to establish standing under these precedents. Mr. Williams asserts no actual or imminent injury, no injury that is certainly pending, no injury that can be redressed by a damages award — he only asserts a remote and speculative injury.
This suit is analogous to a recently decided • case in this district,
Randolph v. ING Life Ins. & Annuity Co.,
The D.C. Circuit has allowed standing in environmental-harm cases based on an alleged increased risk of harm.
Natural Res. Def. Council (“NRDC”) v. EPA,
Mountain States
is illustrative. There, nonprofit corporations, a lumber company, and municipalities brought suit to prevent the Forest Service from implementing a decision to limit timber harvesting in a national forest. The D.C. Circuit found that the incremental increase in the risk of forest fires due to the Forest Service’s decision was a sufficient threat to environmental interests to support standing to challenge the decision. “[T]he potential destruction of fire is so severe that relatively modest increments in risk should qualify for standing.”
Id.
at 1235. Thus, the Circuit found standing where the plaintiffs showed both a substantial increased risk of injury together with a substantial probability of harm. Similarly, in
NRDC,
an environmental group consisting of 500,-000 members sought review of an EPA rule permitting critical-use exemptions from a general ban on the production and consumption of methyl bromide.
NRDC,
Like the plaintiffs in
Mountain States
and
NRDC,
Mr. Williams claims an increased risk to his health based on environmental exposure. The analogy, however, stops there. In those cases, the plaintiffs were large organizations who were seeking injunctive relief. The organizations only had to show that at least
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one of their members had standing to sue in his own right.
NRDC,
Here, Mr. Williams must show that he personally has standing — that he has both (i) a substantially increased risk of harm and (ii) a substantial probability of harm with that increase taken into account. Mr. Williams submitted the report of an expert, Mr. Repace, indicating that the population at the D.C. Jail who were exposed to ETS for a period of one year at the time Mr. Williams was incarcerated will suffer a 55% increased risk of heart disease, 38 times the lung cancer risk of the average adult U.S. male, and an unquantifiable increase in the risk of nasal sinus cancer and asthma induction. While the report reflects an increased risk of harm, it does not indicate the probability of harm to Mr. Williams. Mr. Repace never tested Mr. Williams. Defs.’ Mem., Ex. 3 at 149-50. Mr. Williams did not present any evidence that he has suffered any actual injury due to his exposure to ETS at the D.C. Jail, and he has not named an expert regarding his physical condition. The expert’s report alone is insufficient to take this suit out of the category of the hypothetical. The potential future injury asserted by Mr. Williams is too remote and speculative to support standing in this case.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons explained above, this case will be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. A memorializing order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
Notes
. While Mr. Williams originally proceeded pro se in this action, he is now ably represented by court-appointed counsel.
. In 2003, Mr. Williams was transferred to a prison in Terre Haute, Indiana.
. Because the expert wrote his report on behalf of Mr. Williams and on behalf of a plaintiff in a similar suit, Abdullah v. Dist. of Columbia Dept, of Corrections, the report refers to "plaintiffs."
. To state an Eighth Amendment claim based on exposure to ETS, a plaintiff must allege that, with deliberate indifference, defendants exposed him to levels of ETS that posed an unreasonable risk of serious damage to his future health.
Helling v. McKinney,
. The parties dispute Mr. Williams's grievance history. Mr. Williams claims he filed numerous grievances concerning ETS, yet Defendants’ files show no record of such grievances. Mr. Williams asserts that Defendants destroyed the grievances he filed. He also explains that he did not pursue the second and third steps of the three-step grievance process because the Inmate Grievance Procedure rules require that an appeal be accompanied by a copy of the original grievance and the response from the administrator, see Defs.' Mem., Ex. 5 Part G ¶ 3, and Mr. Williams never received a response from the administrator.
