AFP
Researchers say the health impacts of air
pollution from the burning of fossil fuels is significantly
underestimated by authorities. [AFP/File / Farooq NAEEM]
A 'pandemic' of air pollution shortens lives worldwide by nearly three
years on average, and causes
8.8 million premature deaths annually,
scientists said Tuesday.
Eliminating the toxic cocktail of molecules and lung-clogging particles
cast off by burning oil, gas and coal would restore a full year of life
expectancy, they reported in the journal Cardiovascular Research.
"Air pollution is a larger public health risk than tobacco smoking,"
lead author Jos Lelieveld of the Max Planck Institute in Mainz, Germany
told AFP.
"Much of it can be avoided by replacing fossil fuels with clean renewable energy."
SEE ALSO :Air pollution 'pandemic' shortens lives by 3 years
Compared
to other causes of premature death, air pollution kills 19 times more
people each year than malaria, nine times more than HIV/AIDS, and three
times more than alcohol, the study found.
Coronary heart disease and stroke account for almost half of those
deaths, with lung diseases and other non-communicable diseases such as
diabetes and high blood pressure accounting for most of the rest.
Only six percent of mortality stemming from polluted air is due to lung cancer.
"Our results show there is an 'air pollution pandemic'," said senior
author Thomas Munzel of the Max Planck Institute's departments of
chemistry and cardiology.
"Both air pollution and smoking are preventable, but over the past
decades much less attention has been paid to air pollution than to
smoking, especially among cardiologists."
The worst-hit region is Asia, where average lifespan is cut 4.1 years in China, 3.9 years in India, and 3.8 years in Pakistan.
In some parts of these countries, toxic air takes an even steeper toll, other research has shown.
In India's Uttar Pradesh -- home to 200 million -- small particle
pollution by itself slashes life expectancy by 8.5 years, while in
China's Hebei Province (population 74 million) the shortfall is nearly
six years, according to the Air Quality Life Index, developed by
researchers at the Energy Policy Institute of Chicago.
African lives are also foreshortened by 3.1 years on average, with
people in some nations -- Chad, Sierra Leone, Central African Republic,
Nigeria and Cote d'Ivoire -- losing 4.5 to 7.3 years.
Among wealthier nations, the Soviet Union's former satellite states have
the deadliest pollution, especially in Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania.
"We show that about two-thirds of premature deaths are attributable to
human-made pollution, mainly from fossil fuel use," Munzel said.
"This goes up to 80 percent in high-income countries," he added.
"5.5 million deaths worldwide a year are potentially avoidable."
Impact 'significantly underestimated'
Unavoidable excess mortality stems from natural dust storms, such as in
central Asia and northern Africa, along with forest fires, though both
phenomena are being amplified by manmade climate change, according to
climate scientists.
The least-impacted regions of the world are the Americas, western and northern Europe, and small island states.
The figure of 8.8 million premature deaths from outdoor air pollution
each year is double estimates from World Health Organization (WHO).
"The impact of air pollution on cardiovascular and other
non-communicable diseases was significantly underestimated," Lelieveld
explained, echoing a conclusion from other recent research.
Air pollution causes damage to the blood vessels through greater
oxidative stress, leading to increases in blood pressure, diabetes,
stroke, heart attacks and heart failure.
The revised number for China is 2.8 million premature deaths each year, two-and-a-half times the WHO estimates.
The researchers said there are signs in India, China and other emerging
economies that people are growing intolerant of life-shortening toxic
air.
"The realisation that air pollution is a major health risk can
contribute to the willingness to phase-out fossil fuels -- with the
co-benefit of reducing climate warming," Lelieveld said.
To assess the impact of air pollution on life expectancy, the
researchers applied data on exposure to micro-particles (PM2.5) and
ozone for the year 2015 to models that simulate how chemical processes
in the atmosphere interact with natural and manmade pollutants, and data
from the Global Burden of Disease.
Indoor pollution -- mainly from cookstoves fuelled by biomass or coal -- is also a major killer, but was not considered here.
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