China Daily (Hong Kong)

Pollution fuels increase in early deaths

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TUZLA, BOSNIA-HERZEGOVIN­A — Stuck between a landfill and a coal-fired power plant, residents of the Bosnian village of Divkovici are dying of asphyxia, poisoned by some of the most polluted air in Europe.

“In a few years, it will be like Chernobyl here: houses without souls,” said unemployed Goran Stojak.

His father died last year of lung cancer, and he is afraid to undergo medical tests for fear of “bad news”. He said his sons, aged 1 and 2, are already suffering from respirator­y problems.

Tuzla, the industrial city housing the power plant, is one of five Balkan cities that are among the 10 most polluted in Europe based on concentrat­ions of particulat­e matter, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

Pljevlja in Montenegro and the Macedonian cities of Skopje, Tetovo and Bitola are also in the dirty top 10. All are home to industries based on coal or lignite, which is used in addition to heat homes.

At the bottom of the basin in which Tuzla sits and polluted air is trapped, the 110,000 residents suffocate in winter.

In Divkovici, the atmosphere is saturated with sul- fur dioxide as well as fine particles.

“Only about 30 of Divkovici’s 500 or so residents remain. Those who can, leave. Cancer is wreaking havoc on the village, where life expectancy is 42 years according to our calculatio­ns,” said Stojak, who is 43.

In the Macedonian capital meanwhile, Aco Ivanov, who lives in the most polluted neighborho­od of Novo Lisice, said he has not left his house for a month.

“The winters in Skopje are a hell for me,” he said. “The air is acrid, stifling, especially in the evening.”

The Western Balkan countries of Bosnia, Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia and Kosovo are together home to about 15 thermal power stations, on which they are highly dependent.

According to a study published in March 2016 by the Brussels-based Health and Environmen­t Alliance, these plants dating back to communist Yugoslavia are responsibl­e for a public health bill of around 2.5 to 8.5 billion euros ($2.6 to 9 billion).

It claims that damage is suffered not only by those living in the region but by people in other European countries, affected by pollution carried in the winds.

“Emissions of some pollutants, such as sulfur dioxide, can be up to 30 times higher than the top levels authorized by European standards,” said Zvjezdan Karadzin, a professor of environmen­tal security in Tuzla.

Contacted by AFP, Elektropri­vreda BiH, the public company that runs the Tuzla plant, declined to comment.

Karadzin said that a second “chronic” problem was that homes were being heated with coal fires, which he termed “the leading cause of pollution in winter”.

The mining and electricit­y sectors employ around 23,000 people in Bosnia, which has a population of 3.5 million.

One of the poorest countries in the region, it produced some 14,400 gigawatts of electricit­y in 2015, 60 percent of it from coal-fired power stations. It is one of the few Balkan states to export electricit­y, which brought in 165 million euros in 2016.

But this has a cost. The head of Tuzla’s pulmonary clinic, Suvad Dedic, reports a 33 percent rise in new cases of lung cancer in two years — from 216 cases in 2014 to 287 last year.

He said the disease usually afflicts people between the ages of 55 and 61, but in the Tuzla area it is starting to strike earlier.

“There are more and more who are 50 or 51 years old, or even under 50. And we’ve even had some cases of children suffering from lung cancer,” said Dedic.

The Bosnian government has said it aims to lower emissions by closing production units, adding filtering devices and constructi­ng more modern infrastruc­ture.

The winters in Skopje are a hell for me. The air is acrid, stifling, especially in the evening.” Aco Ivanov, resident of the Novo Lisice neighborho­od

 ?? VINCENT KESSLER / REUTERS ?? Swedish Member of the European Parliament Jytte Guteland holds her baby as she takes part in a voting session at the headquarte­rs in Strasbourg, France.
VINCENT KESSLER / REUTERS Swedish Member of the European Parliament Jytte Guteland holds her baby as she takes part in a voting session at the headquarte­rs in Strasbourg, France.

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