The Citizen (KZN)

Asia hit by air pollution crisis

CONCERNED DELEGATES HAVE URGED TOUGHER ENFORCEMEN­T OF CURBS Children are ‘uniquely vulnerable’ and 300 million live in affected areas.

- Bangkok

Asia is a critical battlefiel­d in the global fight to rein in air pollution, registerin­g about five million premature deaths each year, delegates at a United Nations conference said yesterday as they urged tougher enforcemen­t of curbs.

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) calls air pollution the greatest environmen­tal risk to human health. About 90% of related deaths take place in low- and middle-income countries, most of them in Southeast Asia and the Pacific.

“There is a sense that if you’re developing economical­ly, it doesn’t mean that you have to live in a city where you can’t breathe the air,” Dechen Tsering, the Asia-Pacific director of the UN environmen­t programme, said at the two-day event.

“There is also a growing sense that there are technologi­es, there is financing [to help],” said Tsering, adding that the region was a key battlegrou­nd in the fight.

Air pollution grew more than 5% between 2008 and 2013 in more than two-thirds of Southeast Asian cities, the WHO said in a report in 2016.

Children are “uniquely vulnerable”, said Karin Hulshof, East Asia and Pacific director for the UN children’s agency, Unicef, adding that about 300 million children worldwide live in areas where the air is toxic.

“What we are seeing, more and more, in cities like Ulanbataar, is hospitals full of children suffering from diseases related to air pollution,” said Hulshof, referring to a public health crisis in Mongolia’s capital caused by toxic smog.

Emissions limits are simply not being enforced in Asia, however, said Andreas Kock, managing director at Scheuch Asia, which develops and produces environmen­tal cleaning technologi­es.

“Basically, they are not investing because the pressure is not there,” said Kock, who called for efforts to spur industries in Asia to adopt pollution-reducing technology.

Major cities, such as Bangkok, need to build comprehens­ive pub- lic transport networks and push citizens to use them, Tsering said, as well as environmen­t-friendly vehicles, like bicycles.

That is the aim of Mobike, a Bangkok-based bike-sharing smartphone applicatio­n that allows people to find bicycles and unlock them by scanning a QR code. –

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