The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China could lift life expectancy by nearly 3 years if it meets WHO smog standards

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BEIJING/SHANGHAI: China could raise average life expectancy by 2.9 years if it improves air quality to levels recommende­d by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), according a new study from a US research group.

China has vowed to determine the precise impact of air and water pollution on health as part of its efforts to raise average life expectancy to 79 years by 2030 from 76.3 years in 2015.

According to the Energy Policy Institute (EPI) at the University of Chicago, big air quality improvemen­ts made in the last five years have already been enough to push up average lifespans.

“China is winning its war against pollution ... (The country) is due to see dramatic improvemen­ts in the overall health of its people, including longer lifespans, if these improvemen­ts are sustained,” EPI director Michael Greenstone said at an event in Beijing on Thursday.

According to the EPI’s findings, air quality improvemen­ts made in the smog-prone northern city of Tianjin over the last five years are already expected to have raised the average lifespan of its 13 million residents by 1.2 years.

China cut average concentrat­ions of hazardous particles known as PM2.5 to an average of 39 micrograms per cubic metre last year, down 9.3 percent from 2017 after a campaign to curb coal use and improve industry and vehicle standards.

However, average emission levels remain significan­tly higher than China’s own 35microgra­mme standard, as well as the 10-microgramm­e limit recommende­d by the WHO. In northern industrial regions, average concentrat­ions are much higher.

In a study cited by state-owned news agency Xinhua yesterday, a group of top Chinese health experts identified air and water pollution as one of the major health risks in China for the next 20 years, alongside obesity, depression and Alzheimer’s disease.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang declared ‘war’ on pollution in 2014 amid fears that the damage done to the country’s environmen­t as a result of more than 30 years of untrammell­ed economic growth would lead to social unrest.

However, with much of the lowhanging fruit already taken and the economy facing a slowdown, China has admitted that the campaign is under pressure.

“It would be very difficult for China to meet the WHO standards even with strong efforts to reduce industrial emissions and fossil fuel consumptio­n,” Jiang Kejun, research professor at the Energy Research Institute, a government think tank, told Reuters on the sidelines of the Thursday event.

“Emissions from non-industrial sectors, agricultur­e for instance, also play a big part in air pollution and are hard to put under control,” he said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo shows vehicles on a road during unusually high levels of dust in Beijing. — AFP photo
File photo shows vehicles on a road during unusually high levels of dust in Beijing. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Students and children release baby turtles into their habitat, on the turtle conservati­on Aroen Meubanja beach, in Aceh Jaya, Aceh province. The release of the turtle is an effort to save and restore the endangered turtle population in Indonesia. — AFP photo
Students and children release baby turtles into their habitat, on the turtle conservati­on Aroen Meubanja beach, in Aceh Jaya, Aceh province. The release of the turtle is an effort to save and restore the endangered turtle population in Indonesia. — AFP photo

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