Global Air Pollution Crisis: A Greater Threat to Public Health Than Smoking or Alcohol Consumption

2023-09-04 21:00:48

Air pollution poses a greater risk to global health than smoking or alcohol consumption, and this danger is exacerbated in certain regions of the world such as Asia and Africa, details a study published at the end of August.

According to this report by the University of Chicago’s Energy Policy Institute (EPIC) on global air quality, fine particle pollution – emitted by motor vehicles, industry and fires – represents “the greatest external threat to global public health.

But despite this observation, the funds allocated to the fight against air pollution represent only a tiny fraction of those, for example, dedicated to infectious diseases, points out the report.

Fine particle pollution increases the risk of developing lung disease, heart disease, stroke or cancer.

Permanent compliance with the fine particle exposure threshold set by the World Health Organization (WHO) would increase global life expectancy by 2.3 years, EPIC estimates, based on data collected in 2021.

By comparison, tobacco consumption reduces global life expectancy by an average of 2.2 years, and child and maternal malnutrition by 1.6 years.

Asia and Africa are struggling

In South Asia, the region of the world most affected by air pollution, the effects on public health are very pronounced.

According to EPIC models, the inhabitants of Bangladesh – where the average level of exposure to fine particles is estimated at 74 μg/m3 – could gain 6.8 years of life expectancy if the pollution threshold were lowered to 5 μg/m3, the level recommended by the WHO.

India’s capital, New Delhi, is the “most polluted megalopolis in the world”, with an average annual rate of 126.5 μg/m3.

Read more:  Haas F1 team representative denies rumors of Daniel Ricciardo acquisition[F1-Gate.com]

Conversely, China has “made remarkable progress in its fight against air pollution” initiated in 2014, underlines Christa Hasenkopf, director of air quality programs at EPIC.

The average air pollution in the country has thus decreased by 42.3% between 2013 and 2021, but remains six times higher than the threshold recommended by the WHO. If this progress continues over time, the Chinese population should gain an average of 2.2 years of life expectancy, estimates the EPIC.

But overall, the regions of the world most exposed to air pollution are those that receive the least means to combat this risk, the report notes.

“There is a deep gap between the places where the air is most polluted and those where the most resources are collectively and globally deployed to solve this problem”, explains Christa Hasenkopf.

If international systems exist to fight against HIV, malaria or tuberculosis, like the Global Fund which deploys 4 billion dollars a year in the fight against these diseases, no equivalent exists for atmospheric pollution.

“And yet, air pollution reduces the average life expectancy of a person in the DRC (Democratic Republic of Congo) and Cameroon more than HIV, malaria and others,” the report points out.

The impact of megafires in Canada

In the United States, the federal Clean Air Act program has helped reduce air pollution by 64.9% since 1970, allowing the average life expectancy of Americans to increase by 1.4 years.

In Europe, the improvement in air quality over the past decades has followed the dynamics of that observed in the United States, but deep disparities persist between the east and the west of the continent.

Read more:  physical exercise that helps prevent it; this is how it can be done

All these efforts are threatened, among other things, by the multiplication of forest fires around the world – caused by the increase in temperatures and the multiplication of droughts, linked to climate change – and which cause peaks in air pollution. .

In 2021, the historic fire season in California, for example, resulted in air pollution in the Californian county of Plumas of the order of five times the threshold limit recommended by the WHO.

The megafires that ravaged Canada in the summer of 2023 caused pollution peaks in Quebec and Ontario, and in several regions of the eastern United States.

Issam AHMAD/AFP

Air pollution poses a greater risk to global health than smoking or alcohol consumption, and this danger is exacerbated in certain regions of the world such as Asia and Africa, details a study published at the end of August. the University of Chicago’s Energy Policy Institute (EPIC) on global air quality,…

1693874618
#Air #pollution #worlds #biggest #threat #health

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.