Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

‘India, China most vulnerable to climate crisis, pollution’

- Chetan Chauhan chetan@hindustant­imes.com

Effects of human-induced climate change Nations at highest risk: Singapore, Rawada, China, India, Solomon Islands

Nations at lowest risk:

NEW DELHI: India and China are among the five countries most vulnerable to climate change and air pollution, a first- of-itskind research assessing the combined risks of the two factors said on Thursday.

The world’s two fastest developing economies have witnessed a spurt in particulat­e matter induced air pollution levels in the past two decades and a simultaneo­us increase in frequency of extreme weather events such as extreme rainfall, frequent cyclones and heat waves .

On Wednesday, extreme rainfall over the week had flooded many parts of Henan province in central China, leaving 33 persons dead. Several other regions of China have faced flooding this week even as north America is witnessing extreme heat wave.

“Deaths resulting from toxic pollution are highest where the distributi­on of toxic pollution is greatest and, critically, also where the impacts of climate change pose the greatest risk,” the study, titled Global Distributi­on and Coincidenc­e of Pollution, Climate Impacts, and Health Risk in the Anthropoce­ne, said, in a specific reference to India and China.

For at least 30 years, the scientists on the UN’s Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change have assessed the impact of human induced climate change even as bodies such as the World Health Organisati­on have focused on the health impact of rising air pollution globally.

Scientists at University of Notre Dame found a “strong and statistica­lly significan­t” link between the two hazards and said the countries which are at most risk from climate change are also the countries with highest risk from toxic pollution.

A vital difference between climate change and air pollution is that green house gases that cause global warming are considered non-toxic whereas air pollutants such as particular matter or nitrogen dioxide are toxic. “It is not surprising to find that these risks are highly correlated, but this study provides the data and analysis to inform policy, data and analysis that were previously lacking,” Debra Javeline, an associate professor of political science at the university said in a statement.

To make the study useful for policymake­rs, the authors ranked 177 countries on “Target”, a measure that combined a country’s climate impact risk, toxic pollution risk and its potential readiness to mitigate these risks. China is the world’s leading total GHG emitter and India is on track to join it at the top and they are the two top ranked countries in terms of toxic air pollution.

On India and China, the two largest countries, with a combined population of over 2.5 billion people, the study said they have relatively high Proportion Mortality ranks --- India ranked 5th and China 13th with 23.5% and 17.9% of annual deaths associated with toxic pollution, equalling 2.3 and 1.9 million premature deaths annually, respective­ly. The study also pointed out that the two nations have come up with national pollution reduction policies to reduce pollution deaths.

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Turkmenist­an, Algeria, Eritrea, Venezuela and Libya

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