Air pollution
has become the world's single biggest environmental health risk, linked
to around 7 million – or nearly one in eight deaths in 2012 – according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).
Link to the article in the Guardian.
The
new figures are more than double previous estimates and suggest that
outdoor pollution from traffic fumes and coal-burning, and indoor
pollution from wood and coal stoves, kills more people than smoking,
road deaths and diabetes combined.
Press release from World Health Organization
Around 80% of the 3.7 million
deaths from outdoor pollution came as a result of stroke and heart
disease, 11% from lung diseases and 6% from cancers. The vast majority
were in Asia, with 180,000 in the Americas and Europe combined, said the
WHO.
Indoor air pollution led to 4.3 million deaths, of which 34%
were caused by strokes, 26% heart diseases and 12% respiratory disease
in children. Only 19,000 of these deaths were in rich countries, with
the vast majority being in low- and middle-income countries. Because
many people are exposed to both indoor and outdoor air pollution, the
WHO said deaths attributed to the two sources cannot be added together.
"The
risks from air pollution are now far greater than previously thought or
understood, particularly for heart disease and strokes," said Maria
Neira, director of WHO's department for public health, environmental and
social determinants of health. "Few risks have a greater impact on
global health today than air pollution; the evidence signals the need
for concerted action to clean up the air we all breathe."
South-east
Asia, said the WHO, is now the most polluted region in the world, with
3.3 million deaths linked to indoor air pollution and 2.6 million deaths
related to outdoor air pollution. This reflects the explosive growth of
cities and industrial development in China and India, as well as continuing deep poverty in rural areas.
The new estimates are based not on an significant increase in
pollution, but on improved knowledge of the links between air pollutants
and heart diseases and cancers, in addition to known links with
respiratory diseases. A 2008 WHO report estimated that outdoor pollution
led to about 1.3 million deaths, while about 1.9 million people were
killed by indoor pollution. A Lancet study last year suggested that the surge in car use in south and east Asia killed 2.1 million people prematurely in 2010. Last year, WHO's cancer agency classified air pollution as a carcinogen, linking dirty air to lung and bladder cancer.
"Cleaning
up the air we breathe prevents non-communicable diseases as well as
reduces disease risks among women and vulnerable groups, including
children and the elderly," said Dr Flavia Bustreo, WHO assistant
director general of family, women and children's health. "Poor women and
children pay a heavy price from indoor air pollution since they spend
more time at home breathing in smoke and soot from leaky coal and wood
cook stoves."
Martin Williams, professor of air quality at the
environmental research group, King's College London, said: "This is an
important study, and although the majority of attributable deaths occur
in south-east Asia and the western Pacific, air pollution impacts on
mortality and health are still a significant public health problem in
Europe, including the UK."
Air pollution is increasingly linked
with ill health and deaths in rich countries as traffic emissions rise.
In the US, air pollution causes about 200,000 early deaths a year, with
emissions from cars and trucks causing 53,000 and power generation
52,000, according to MIT's environment laboratory. California suffers
most from air pollution, with 21,000 early deaths.
In Europe, poor
air quality is the top environmental cause of premature deaths in the
EU, causing more than 100,000 premature deaths a year and costing from
£300bn-£800bn a year in extra health costs, said Janez Potočnik, the EU
environment commissioner.
Air pollution causes 29,000 early deaths a year in the UK and similar numbers in France and Germany.
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