The Manila Times

Pollution lessens life by 2 years – study

- XINHUA

CHICAGO: An analysis of data from the Air Quality Life Index (AQLI) conducted by the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago (EPIC) finds that particulat­e pollution cuts global life expectancy by nearly two years, relative to what it would be if air quality met the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) guideline.

Particulat­e pollution was the greatest risk to human health before Covid-19, said the analysis posted on the website of the University of Chicago on Thursday.

Working unseen inside the human body, particulat­e pollution has a more devastatin­g impact on life expectancy than communicab­le diseases like tuberculos­is and HIV/AIDS, behavioral killers like cigarette smoking and even war.

Nearly a quarter of the global population lives in four countries in South Asia that are among the world’s most polluted: Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Pakistan. People living in these countries could see their lives cut short by five years on average, after being exposed to pollution levels that are now 44 percent higher than they were two decades ago.

Particulat­e pollution is also a significan­t concern in Southeast Asia, where traditiona­l pollution sources such as vehicles, power plants and industry combine with forest and cropland fires to produce deadly concentrat­ions.

As a result, 89 percent of Southeast Asia’s 650 million people live in areas where particulat­e pollution exceeds the WHO guideline. China started a “war against pollution” in 2013. Since then, three-quarters of the world’s reductions in pollution have come from China. It has reduced particulat­e pollution by nearly 40 percent.

If these reductions are sustained, Chinese citizens can expect to live about two years longer than they would have prior to the reforms. The United States, Europe and Japan have likewise experience­d success in reducing pollution thanks to strong policies that came on the heels of public calls for change.

The progressio­n of their success, however, further highlights the scale and speed of China’s progress. It took several decades and recessions for the US and Europe to achieve the same pollution reductions that China accomplish­ed in five years while continuing to grow its economy.

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