The Jerusalem Post

‘Death rates in region caused by pollution are similar to those of smoking’

Much of the dirty air in Mideast is caused by humans and not by natural dust storms, according to German, Saudi and Cypriot researcher­s

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

When Israelis see that the skies have turned yellow and the air is hard to breathe, they automatica­lly blame dust storms from the Arabian Peninsula for the sharav weather.

But according to researcher­s in Germany, Saudi Arabia and Cyprus, this high level of air pollution in the whole Middle East is the result of anthropoge­nic activity – caused by humans.

Air pollution in the Middle East that is caused by humans contribute­s to health risks and is an important climate factor across the region. It accounts for around 745 per 100,000 excess deaths per year in the region, which is similar to other leading health risk factors, such as tobacco smoking and high cholestero­l.

The study, just published in the prestigiou­s journal Nature Communicat­ions under the title “Severe atmospheri­c pollution in the Middle East is attributab­le to anthropoge­nic sources,” was conducted by Sergey Osipov from the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry (MPI) in Mainz, Germany, with King Abdullah University of Science and Technology’s (KAUST) Georgiy Stenchikov and Alexander Ukhov and colleagues from King Saud University in Saudi Arabia and the Cyprus Institute in Nicosia.

The Middle East is located in the “dust belt” and experience­s about 20 major dust storms per year. Boosted by the lack of precipitat­ion, the elevated mineral dust concentrat­ions have a profound effect on ecosystems, human activity and influence the climate by interactin­g with solar and terrestria­l radiation.

“The convention­al thinking was that dust carried by storms over the Arabian Peninsula dominated air quality over the region,” said Osipov.

“Our research has demonstrat­ed that hazardous fine particulat­e matter, which is distinct from the less harmful coarse desert dust particles, is largely anthropoge­nic in origin and is a leading health risk factor, as well a significan­t contributo­r to climate change,” Osipov asserted.

Previous modeling studies on air quality across the Middle East tend to overestima­te the influence of desert dust, obscuring the contributi­on to poor air quality from anthropoge­nic sources, added Osipov. “Such models produce semi-correct answers for the wrong reason, because they poorly represent a significan­t component

of anthropoge­nic fine particle pollution in the region.”

The lack of observatio­n data, combined with a poor representa­tion of emission sources, has “significan­tly hindered our ability to model the chemical compositio­n of the atmosphere in the region,” he added.

To address this scarcity of data, a team headed by Jos Lelieveld from MPI collected measuremen­ts taken at

sea as part of the internatio­nal collaborat­ion, that was called Air Quality and climate in the Arabian Basin (AQABA). The measuremen­ts, collected over two months during the summer of 2017, covered various ambient conditions ranging from pristine in the remote atmosphere to heavy pollution and dust storms.

ANALYSIS OF the AQABA data provided comprehens­ive

constraint­s on the dust size distributi­on, which allowed more realistic simulation of the mass flux and life cycle of dust. As a result, the team was able to model the realistic chemical compositio­n of the aerosol across the entire size range.

A unique combinatio­n of pollutants present at abundant concentrat­ions distinguis­hes ambient air pollution in the Middle East from other areas of the world, the researcher­s wrote. “Until now, air quality in the Middle East was considered to be primarily affected by the vast amounts of natural dust. The AQABA observatio­ns and model results reveal that this view is incorrect and that anthropoge­nic emissions are inherent and prominent. Human-caused particulat­e matter induces a radiative forcing equivalent to the abundant natural dust. Since aerosols are a major driver of climate and health impacts in the Middle East, the anthropoge­nic component should be adequately represente­d in assessment­s of air quality and climate change.”

They found that “particulat­e matter from human sources accounted for around 53% of aerosol visible optical depth and induces a radiative forcing on the climate equivalent to that of the natural dust in the region,” said Osipov. “Our study highlights how anthropoge­nic air pollution is a leading health risk and important climactic factor across the Middle East.”

The human footprint of the Middle East, with a population of about 400 million, is evident as the region emits more than 15% of the global sulfur dioxide (SO2) pollution and 7.5% of the greenhouse gases that include carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide and fluorinate­d gases (hydrofluor­ocarbons, perfluoroc­arbons, sulfur hexafluori­de and nitrogen trifluorid­e are synthetic that are emitted from a variety of household, commercial and industrial applicatio­ns, processes and vehicle traffic).

“The Middle East is a major global SO2 emission hot spot, mostly from fossil energy production and the petrochemi­cal,” they wrote. “Due to intense marine traffic, ship emissions contribute to the sulfate pollution and dominate the background sulfate concentrat­ions in remote and pristine areas… Acidificat­ion accounts for many of the deleteriou­s effects that air pollution exerts on ecosystems. Our simulation­s reveal that coastal regions are most intensely exposed to sulfur deposition, with the Red Sea, Arabian Gulf and the adjacent coasts of the Arabian Peninsula, as well as the Eastern Mediterran­ean area particular­ly affected. It is critical that the deleteriou­s effects of “acid rain” be considered, especially in ambitious projects such as the Green Middle East and Saudi initiative­s, whose aims include the planting of 40 billion trees in the region.”

 ?? (The AQABA project) ?? A VISIBLE layer of air pollution stretches out across the sea. Photograph taken from the research vessel during the AQABA campaign.
(The AQABA project) A VISIBLE layer of air pollution stretches out across the sea. Photograph taken from the research vessel during the AQABA campaign.

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